Pharmaceutical Commerce: What Is Smart Pharma Packaging?

June 26, 2025

We are syndicating the following podcast episodes from Pharmaceutical Commerce:

What Is Smart Pharma Packaging? (Part 1)

Embedded Product Intelligence’s Role in Maintaining Cold Chain Integrity (Part 2)

 


What Is Smart Pharma Packaging?

 

In the first part of her Pharma Commerce video interview, Kirsten Newquist, Identiv’s CEO, defines the term, and explains how it is helping to combat the growing threat of counterfeit drugs in today’s global supply chain.

In a video interview with Pharma Commerce, Kirsten Newquist, Identiv’s CEO, defines "smart pharma packaging" as the integration of technology into pharmaceutical packaging to enhance product identification, tracking, and patient engagement. She explains that packaging primarily involves embedding technologies such as RFID radio-frequency identification (RFID) or Bluetooth low energy (BLE) into pharmaceutical containers. These technologies assign a unique digital ID to each package, enabling serialization, which is critical for tracking and traceability across the global supply chain.

This digital ID allows stakeholders—from manufacturers to pharmacists and patients—to verify a drug’s authenticity at every step of its journey. This significantly reduces the risk of counterfeit drugs entering the system, as products can be authenticated upon delivery or administration. Newquist emphasizes that this kind of smart packaging not only strengthens supply chain security but also fosters better patient engagement, offering real-time data that can support dosage verification and proper usage.

Additionally, she notes a secondary dimension of smart packaging: smart drug delivery systems. These include technologically enhanced devices like auto-injectors, smart pillboxes, or connected syringes, which offer further layers of verification and ensure patients receive the correct medication and dosage. While this may go beyond traditional packaging, it aligns with the broader goals of improving safety, compliance, and confidence in the pharmaceutical supply chain.

Overall, smart pharma packaging plays a crucial role in combating drug counterfeiting by improving transparency and traceability from production to patient use. By embedding intelligence into packaging and delivery systems, the pharmaceutical industry is better equipped to protect product integrity and ensure patient safety in an increasingly complex global supply chain.

Newquist also comments on the role embedded product intelligence plays in maintaining cold chain integrity, and why is this so critical for pharmaceutical safety and efficacy; how regulatory mandates, such as the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA), influence the adoption of smarter packaging technologies across the industry; some of the biggest challenges pharmaceutical companies face in implementing this infrastructure, and much more.

A transcript of her conversation with PC can be found below.

PC: How would you define “smart pharma packaging,” and how is it helping to combat the growing threat of counterfeit drugs in today’s global supply chain?

Newquist: In my mind, what that really means is the integration of intelligence or technology into the packaging—in this case, putting an identification on the smart packaging. In the case of radio-frequency identification (RFID) or Bluetooth low energy (BLE) technology—which is a type of technology that my company develops—it's really giving everything a unique digital ID. It enables serialization of the product, which helps with tracking of the product through the supply chain. It helps with enabling traceability. It helps with engagement, once the patient or the pharmacist actually receives the product. It's really about adding this technology and intelligence to the packaging that's used for the pharmaceutical. That’s my primary definition.

There's a secondary one as well, where there's also smart drug delivery packaging. Maybe that goes beyond what your question is, but there is also technology that can be embedded into drug delivery devices, like syringes, auto injectors, or pill boxes that also enable patients to be ensured that they've got the right drug, that they've got the right dose, etc.

First and foremost, it's around true pharmaceutical packaging. Then secondly, I think there's also this pharmaceutical packaging concept that's really more around drug delivery, and in both cases, it really does help with counterfeiting, because it enables you to track the drug through the supply chain and trace it through the supply chain, but also when it gets to the patient or the pharmacist, doctor, or whoever is delivering the drug, they can verify that it is the actual drug, that it is not counterfeit. They can authenticate it and really make sure that it's not a counterfeit drug.

 

Embedded Product Intelligence’s Role in Maintaining Cold Chain Integrity

 

In the second part of her Pharma Commerce video interview, Kirsten Newquist, Identiv’s CEO, describes why this technology is essential for pharmaceutical safety and efficacy.

In a video interview with Pharma Commerce, Kirsten Newquist, Identiv’s CEO, defines “smart pharma packaging” as the integration of technology into pharmaceutical packaging to enhance product identification, tracking, and patient engagement. She explains that packaging primarily involves embedding technologies such as RFID radio-frequency identification (RFID) or Bluetooth low energy (BLE) into pharmaceutical containers. These technologies assign a unique digital ID to each package, enabling serialization, which is critical for tracking and traceability across the global supply chain.

This digital ID allows stakeholders—from manufacturers to pharmacists and patients—to verify a drug’s authenticity at every step of its journey. This significantly reduces the risk of counterfeit drugs entering the system, as products can be authenticated upon delivery or administration. Newquist emphasizes that this kind of smart packaging not only strengthens supply chain security but also fosters better patient engagement, offering real-time data that can support dosage verification and proper usage.

Additionally, she notes a secondary dimension of smart packaging: smart drug delivery systems. These include technologically enhanced devices like auto-injectors, smart pillboxes, or connected syringes, which offer further layers of verification and ensure patients receive the correct medication and dosage. While this may go beyond traditional packaging, it aligns with the broader goals of improving safety, compliance, and confidence in the pharmaceutical supply chain.

Overall, smart pharma packaging plays a crucial role in combating drug counterfeiting by improving transparency and traceability from production to patient use. By embedding intelligence into packaging and delivery systems, the pharmaceutical industry is better equipped to protect product integrity and ensure patient safety in an increasingly complex global supply chain.

Newquist also comments on the role embedded product intelligence plays in maintaining cold chain integrity, and why is this so critical for pharmaceutical safety and efficacy; how regulatory mandates, such as the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA), influence the adoption of smarter packaging technologies across the industry; some of the biggest challenges pharmaceutical companies face in implementing this infrastructure, and much more.

A transcript of her conversation with PC can be found below.

PC: What role does embedded product intelligence play in maintaining cold chain integrity, and why is this so critical for pharmaceutical safety and efficacy?

Newquist: In addition to a digital ID, you can also embed sensors into the smart packaging, so you can embed temperature sensors, humidity sensors, pressure sensors, and obviously, probably the most critical for cold chain management is temperature sensors.

What this really enables you to do—especially if you're using active-sensing technology in combination with RFID—is really be able to track in real time the temperature of these very expensive, organic pharmaceuticals that are really driving the industry growth today. I think it's absolutely a critical part of what smart packaging can do, and as you said, the rise of personalized medicine, the rise of all these organic compounds that are being developed by the pharmaceutical industry, they absolutely do require very careful monitoring throughout the supply chain.

I think this technology that enables not only the digital identification—but can also include sensors to monitor temperature—can be a real game changer, by ensuring that these drugs are being taken through the supply chain at the appropriate temperature. By getting this information in real time, if they see that it's not being maintained at the proper refrigeration level, there’s actually things that they can do to ensure it gets back into refrigeration to really maintain the compliance that they need for the right temperatures. We think that's a really important part of the smart packaging trends.

How Regulatory Mandates Influence Technology

In the third part of her Pharma Commerce video interview, Kirsten Newquist, Identiv’s CEO, shares the ways in which regulations, including DSCSA, are impacting the adoption of smarter packaging technologies across the industry.

In a video interview with Pharma Commerce, Kirsten Newquist, Identiv’s CEO, defines “smart pharma packaging” as the integration of technology into pharmaceutical packaging to enhance product identification, tracking, and patient engagement. She explains that packaging primarily involves embedding technologies such as RFID radio-frequency identification (RFID) or Bluetooth low energy (BLE) into pharmaceutical containers. These technologies assign a unique digital ID to each package, enabling serialization, which is critical for tracking and traceability across the global supply chain.

This digital ID allows stakeholders—from manufacturers to pharmacists and patients—to verify a drug’s authenticity at every step of its journey. This significantly reduces the risk of counterfeit drugs entering the system, as products can be authenticated upon delivery or administration. Newquist emphasizes that this kind of smart packaging not only strengthens supply chain security but also fosters better patient engagement, offering real-time data that can support dosage verification and proper usage.

Additionally, she notes a secondary dimension of smart packaging: smart drug delivery systems. These include technologically enhanced devices like auto-injectors, smart pillboxes, or connected syringes, which offer further layers of verification and ensure patients receive the correct medication and dosage. While this may go beyond traditional packaging, it aligns with the broader goals of improving safety, compliance, and confidence in the pharmaceutical supply chain.

Overall, smart pharma packaging plays a crucial role in combating drug counterfeiting by improving transparency and traceability from production to patient use. By embedding intelligence into packaging and delivery systems, the pharmaceutical industry is better equipped to protect product integrity and ensure patient safety in an increasingly complex global supply chain.

Newquist also comments on the role embedded product intelligence plays in maintaining cold chain integrity, and why is this so critical for pharmaceutical safety and efficacy; how regulatory mandates, such as the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA), influence the adoption of smarter packaging technologies across the industry; some of the biggest challenges pharmaceutical companies face in implementing this infrastructure, and much more.

A transcript of her conversation with PC can be found below.

PC: How are regulatory mandates, such as the DSCSA, influencing the adoption of smarter packaging technologies across the industry?

Newquist: These regulatory mandates, they can be game changers in terms of people adopting this type of technology, because these are difficult systems to implement and they require upfront investment. They require a lot of partners working together—there's a lot of complexity to make these work. When they're regulated, that puts some real fire behind actually having to implement these things.

Specifically, RFID technology is definitely one way that these regulations can be adhered to and can be moved forward. We've definitely seen more interesting questions and people wondering how this can really benefit DSCSA implementation. Serialization is required at the package unit level. RFID can automate some of this, and really help to scale up some of these ways of compliance. It can also provide some additional benefits as well as just compliance with the regulation. They can also help in terms of traceability, inventory management, providing real-time analytics. We definitely have seen that these regulations create a lot of interest and a lot of people are exploring how to implement these solutions so that they can be in compliance.