Extemporaneous Compounding, Pharmacy Preparations and Related Product Care in the Netherlands

  • Herman J Woerdenbag*
  • , Boy van Basten
  • , Christien Oussoren
  • , Oscar S N M Smeets
  • , Astrid Annaciri-Donkers
  • , Mirjam Crul
  • , J Marina Maurer
  • , Kirsten J M Schimmel
  • , E Marleen Kemper
  • , Marjolijn N Lub-de Hooge
  • , Nanno Schreuder
  • , Melissa Eikmann
  • , Arwin S Ramcharan
  • , Richard B Lantink
  • , Julian Quodbach
  • , Hendrikus H Boersma
  • , Oscar Kelder
  • , Karin H M Larmené-Beld
  • , Paul P H Le Brun
  • , Robbert Jan Kok
  • Reinout C A Schellekens, Oscar Breukels, Henderik W Frijlink, Bahez Gareb
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Background/Objectives: In many parts of the world, pharmacists hold the primary responsibility for providing safe and effective pharmacotherapy. A key aspect is the availability of appropriate medicines for each individual patient. When industrially manufactured medicines are unsuitable or unavailable, pharmacists can prepare tailor-made medicines. While this principle applies globally, practices vary between countries. In the Netherlands, the preparation of medicines in pharmacies is well-established and integrated into routine healthcare. This narrative review explores the role and significance of extemporaneous compounding, pharmacy preparations and related product care in the Netherlands. Methods: Pharmacists involved in pharmacy preparations across various professional sectors, including community and hospital pharmacies, central compounding facilities, academia, and the professional pharmacists' organisation, provided detailed and expert insights based on the literature and policy documents while also sharing their critical perspectives. Results: We present arguments supporting the need for pharmacy preparations and examine their position and role in community and hospital pharmacies in the Netherlands. Additional topics are discussed, including the regulatory and legal framework, outsourcing, quality assurance, standardisation, education, and international context. Specific pharmacy preparation topics, often with a research component and a strong focus on product care, are highlighted, including paediatric dosage forms, swallowing difficulties and feeding tubes, hospital-at-home care, reconstitution of oncolytic drugs and biologicals, total parenteral nutrition (TPN), advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs), radiopharmaceuticals and optical tracers, clinical trial medication, robotisation in reconstitution, and patient-centric solid oral dosage forms. Conclusions: The widespread acceptance of pharmacy preparations in the Netherlands is the result of a unique combination of strict adherence to tailored regulations that ensure quality and safety, and patient-oriented flexibility in design, formulation, and production. This approach is further reinforced by the standardisation of a broad range of formulations and procedures across primary, secondary and tertiary care, as well as by continuous research-driven innovation to develop new medicines, formulations, and production methods.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1005
Number of pages48
JournalPharmaceutics
Volume17
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Jul 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.

Funding

Currently, several ATMPs are being developed in Dutch academic hospitals (), with the ultimate goal of clinical application and patient access to novel therapies. To support this goal, the national consortium DARE-NL (Dutch infrastructure for cancer-specific ATMP Research) was established in 2022 and funded by the Dutch Cancer Society (KWF) [].

Funders
DARE-NL
KWF Kankerbestrijding

    Keywords

    • advanced therapy medicinal products (ATMPs)
    • biologicals
    • community pharmacy
    • extemporaneous compounding
    • hospital pharmacy
    • legislation and regulations
    • oncolytic medicinal products
    • personalised medicine
    • pharmaceutical product care
    • pharmacy education
    • pharmacy preparations
    • radiopharmaceuticals
    • total parenteral nutrition (TPN)

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