Lutte contre la contrefaçon dans la pharmacie : Sérialisation et authentification

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How barcode serialization and authentication technologies combat pharmaceutical counterfeiting — global regulations, e-pedigree, and patient verification apps.

Anti-Counterfeiting in Pharma: Serialization & Authentication

Pharmaceutical counterfeiting is a global crisis estimated at $75-200 billion annually. Barcode-based serialization and authentication technologies form the primary defense, enabling verification at every point in the supply chain.

The Counterfeiting Threat

Counterfeit medicines range from completely fake products (no active ingredient) to substandard products (wrong dose) to diverted products (legitimate but illegally redirected). Consequences include patient harm, antimicrobial resistance, and erosion of trust in the pharmaceutical supply chain.

Serialization as Defense

Each legitimate drug package carries a unique barcode with:

(01)GTIN (17)Expiry (10)Lot (21)Serial

This serial number is: - Cryptographically random (cannot be predicted) - Registered in the manufacturer's verification system - Verified at each supply chain handoff - Checked at the point of dispensing

A counterfeit package would need a valid, unused serial number, which is virtually impossible to obtain.

E-Pedigree

An electronic pedigree tracks the chain of custody for each serialized unit:

Manufacturer → Wholesaler A → Wholesaler B → Pharmacy
    (event)       (event)         (event)       (event)

Each transfer event records the serialized barcode data, creating an unbroken chain of custody. Gaps in the pedigree indicate potential counterfeiting or diversion.

Point-of-Dispense Verification

At the pharmacy:

  1. Pharmacist scans the GS1 DataMatrix on the drug package
  2. System sends a verification request to the manufacturer's database
  3. Manufacturer confirms: serial number is valid, not recalled, not previously dispensed
  4. If verification fails, the pharmacist is alerted to quarantine the product

Global Regulatory Framework

Regulation Region Key Requirement
DSCSA US Serialization + verification by 2023
EU FMD Europe Serialized 2D barcode + end-point verification since 2019
FMD Russia Russia Serialization with national tracking system
India DCTRL India Track and trace for export drugs
Brazil ANVISA Brazil Serialization for controlled substances

EU Falsified Medicines Directive (FMD)

The EU FMD requires:

  • Unique identifier (serial number) on every prescription drug package
  • Anti-tamper device on the packaging
  • Verification at the point of dispense
  • National verification databases connected to an EU hub

Pharmacists scan the Data Matrix barcode and the system verifies the serial number against the EU hub database. If the serial is unknown, already dispensed, or recalled, the dispensing is blocked.

Authentication Technologies Beyond Barcodes

Some manufacturers add additional authentication layers:

  • Tamper-evident packaging: Physical evidence of opening
  • Covert features: UV-visible inks, microtext, hidden images
  • Digital watermarks: Invisible patterns readable by smartphone cameras
  • Blockchain: Immutable record of supply chain events

These complement barcode serialization but do not replace it.

Patient Verification Apps

Several countries have launched consumer-facing apps:

  • Patients scan the drug barcode with their smartphone
  • App verifies the serial number against the manufacturer's database
  • Verification result displayed: authentic, suspicious, or unable to verify
  • Reports of suspicious products are forwarded to regulators

Implementation Challenges

  • Global scale: Billions of packages to serialize annually
  • Cost: $0.02-0.10 per package for serialization infrastructure
  • Interoperability: Systems must work across borders and trading partners
  • Speed: Production lines running at 300+ packages per minute need inline serialization