Focus on quality and value
The demands on drug delivery and self-diagnostics devices are growing, but manufacturers of high-precision components are offering device companies better quality and value. This is the message major pharma wants to hear.
An ever larger number
of devices for drug
delivery or selfdiagnosis
lie in the hands
of patients, who not only
want them to perform well,
but also expect them to be
durable and easy to use. At
the same time, however, the
pharmaceutical companies
behind these devices are
operating in increasingly
competitive markets, with
a keen eye on costs.
Sensing an opportunity
to bring their experience
from other markets to
bear on the medical device
sector, Swiss company
forteq is matching
technical excellence with
a comprehensive range
of services to bring new
devices to market, with costefficiency
a key objective.
Broad focus
forteq designs, develops and
manufactures highprecision
plastic parts
and gears for the global
healthcare, automotive,
consumer electronics
and office equipment
markets. Healthcare is
an increasingly important
part of the business stream,
and the company has
invested heavily in R&D
since its spin-off from
Mikron two years ago.
‘Delivery systems need highprecision
components, but
they must also be simple
to use,’ says Rune Bakke,
CEO of forteq Group. ‘We
not only have the technical
capability to achieve that,
but we have also made the
effort to understand the
needs of customers in the
healthcare sector.’
From its initial focus on
inhalers, forteq is now
broadening its scope to
other devices such as pen
injectors. The first goal was
to understand the needs
of asthmatics who want
their medication to have
a rapid effect, so require
delivery devices that can be
used quickly and simply.
The company is opening
its market focus to the
area of non-conventional
injection systems for
specific treatments with
biotech drugs that cannot
be delivered orally.
‘We cover the whole value
chain from design to
manufacture,’ says Joachim
Franke, managing director
of forteq’s healthcare
business. ‘We give our
customers everything
from the concept stage
to industrialisation. The
assembly and finishing
steps are not always found
with our competitors.’
From birth to maturity
The end-to-end nature of
forteq’s service offering
has quickly proved to be
a compelling proposition
for the pharmaceutical
industry, where many
companies sense that now is
a good time to rethink the
design of new and existing
products to achieve greater
efficiency and performance.
‘The pharmaceutical
industry faces growing
competition from generics,
so there is a need for them
to find more competitive
solutions to achieve cost
savings and products that
are simpler to make and
use,’ explains Franke. ‘A lot
of drugs are off-patent now,
and some companies are
redesigning their existing
products. It is an industry
that is sensitive to price, but
quality is just as important.’
Two of the world’s leading
pharma use forteq for the
design of new devices,
which should be the start
of a growing pipeline of
large-scale projects.
‘Most of our client
relationships have
developed since we spun
off from Mikron, so we are
getting new business,’ says
Bakke. ‘We have around 50
engineers around the world,
across all our business
sectors, and their skills
allow us to bring more
resources to bigger projects.’
forteq’s approach is to
allow its experience of
other industry sectors to
inform its design process.
For example, in designing
products that are userfriendly,
there is a lot to be
learnt from the automotive
market, where safety, cost
and durability are key
design parameters.
With a global network of
suppliers to ensure that it
covers all components, not
just the plastic elements of
a new device, and a longterm
approach to client
relationships, Bakke and
Franke feel that forteq
offers its clients unique
added value in its ability
to inform the design stage
then take an idea to market.
A growing number of clients
are starting to agree.