Manufacturing Intelligence: Digital Twins Meet Pharma Containers

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Mihaela Simianu and Austin Caudle join the show to discuss how digital container twins can improve pharma manufacturing, validation, and risk reduction.

In Episode 3 of Manufacturing Intelligence, co-hosts Chris Cole and Richard Jaenisch explore the emerging role of digital twins in pharmaceutical container systems with guests Mihaela Simianu, president of Concordia MCS and scientific advisor to SmartSkin Technologies, and Austin Caudle, vice president at SmartSkin Technologies.

The discussion centers on how “smart” pharmaceutical container replicas—equipped with sensors and data-capture capabilities—can help manufacturers better understand how vials, syringes, cartridges, and other container closure systems interact with manufacturing equipment throughout the product lifecycle. Simianu explains that while today’s technology is not yet a fully virtualized digital twin, these physical smart replicas provide critical real-time data about seal forces, equipment interactions, and operational stresses that can impact product quality and patient safety.

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The guests emphasize that container intelligence can play a significant role across development, clinical manufacturing, commercial scale-up, and tech transfer between manufacturing sites and CDMOs. By using sensor-enabled replicas to monitor equipment-container interactions, companies can reduce glass breakage, minimize downtime, optimize line setup, and better maintain container closure integrity throughout production and distribution.

A key theme throughout the conversation is risk reduction. Simianu and Caudle argue that integrating these tools early in development creates continuity as products move between facilities and scales, helping manufacturers preserve process understanding and reduce variability tied to changing equipment environments.

The episode also highlights broader industry trends toward data-driven manufacturing, predictive analytics, and digital transformation, positioning smart container technologies as foundational building blocks for the future of pharmaceutical digital twins and advanced manufacturing intelligence.