· 1 min read

Repurposing Standard Hospital Analysers into Anticounterfeiting Tools

Nicola Sudan
Nicola Sudan · Editor
Repurposing Standard Hospital Analysers into Anticounterfeiting Tools

A research team 1 led by the University of Oxford, with participation from University of East London researcher Dr Hamid Merchant, has demonstrated that standard hospital chemistry analysers can accurately distinguish genuine liquid medicines from falsified versions.

The breakthrough lies not in new hardware, but in repurposing existing clinical chemistry analysers – the automated laboratory systems routinely used to measure glucose, electrolytes, proteins and enzymes in patient samples. These instruments, manufactured by companies such as Roche Diagnostics and Abbott Laboratories, are already installed in hospitals worldwide.

The researchers showed that liquid medicines such as insulin and vaccines exhibit identifiable biochemical profiles – including specific protein concentrations, stability markers and solution characteristics – that can be measured using standard spectrophotometric and enzymatic assays. Counterfeit or degraded products deviate measurably from these expected signatures, allowing suspect batches to be flagged rapidly for further specialist analysis.

Subscriber content

Read the full article

Full access to Tax Stamp & Authentication News™ articles, newsletters and archives.

Sign Up to Tax Stamp & Authentication News™ Weekly

Receive regular updates on the latest news and articles posted on our website.

Verity

Verity

AI search assistant

Ask me anything from the Tax Stamp & Authentication News™ archives.

free questions remaining