Reducing Visual Defect Rates (%) in Concerta Tablets for Fuji Japan Inspection

dc.contributor.advisorGonzález Miranda, Carlos J.
dc.contributor.authorBaella Anzalota, Ignacio
dc.contributor.authorAvilés Reymundí, Gloriangely
dc.contributor.authorLópez Irizarry, Ana
dc.contributor.otherUniversidad Politécnica de Puerto Rico, San Juan Campus, Industrial and Systems Engineering Department, Industrial Engineering Program
dc.coverage.spatialSan Juan (Puerto Rico)
dc.date.accessioned2026-06-26T15:42:20Z
dc.date.issued2026-05
dc.descriptionFinal research poster for the senior design project (Capstone).
dc.description.abstractThis Capstone project applies the DMAIC methodology to reduce the visual defect rate of Concerta tablets manufactured at the Johnson & Johnson Innovative Medicine Gurabo site for the Japan market. The project focuses on the 18 mg, 27 mg, and 36 mg dosage strengths and includes the manufacturing process from granulation through tablet counting. The customer-detected defect signal occurs during Fuji, Japan AQL inspection prior to packaging. During the Define phase, the team established the business context, project scope, customer requirements, process boundaries, stakeholder map, high-level process flow, SIPOC, and CTQ requirements. The Voice of the Customer was developed using three sources: Fuji Japan AQL inspection data, operator survey results across manufacturing shifts, and interviews with OROS manufacturing leadership and supervision. These inputs consistently point to visual defects primarily related to printing and coating integrity. During the Measure phase, the team quantified the current problem using both historical Fuji defect data and an NC Investigation Defect Catalog covering December 2024 through December 2025. Historical AQL sampling across 93 bulk lots identified 20,415 visual defects, with printing defects representing 51.7% and coating-related defects representing 24.4% of the total defect count. Together, these two categories account for 76.1% of all defects identified in the historical Fuji data. More recent customer data confirmed that Concerta defect rates exceeded target levels for all three dosage strengths reviewed. The 18 mg strength had an average defect rate of 2.28% compared to a target of ≤1.80%, the 27 mg strength had an average defect rate of 5.68% compared to a target of ≤4.00%, and the 36 mg strength had an average defect rate of 0.89% compared to a target of ≤0.80%. The measurement baseline indicates that the defect pattern is not random. Printing-related issues and coating failures dominate the investigation data, with Concerta 18 mg and 27 mg representing the highest concentration of investigations. Several lots also recur across multiple investigations, indicating potential process stability concerns. These findings support a focused Analyze phase centered on process stability, defect detection capability, setup variation, and the process conditions associated with printing and coating defect occurrence.
dc.identifier.citationBaella Anzalota, I., Avilés Reymundí, G., & López Irizarry, A. (2026). Reducing visual defect rates (%) in concerta tablets for Fuji Japan Inspection [Capstone Project Poster]. Industrial and Systems Engineering Department, Polytechnic University of Puerto Rico.
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12475/3333
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherPolytechnic University of Puerto Rico
dc.relation.ispartofUniversidad Politécnica de Puerto Rico. Colecciones Especiales y Archivo Histórico
dc.relation.ispartofseriesSan Juan Campus
dc.relation.ispartofseriesIndustrial and Systems Engineering Department
dc.relation.ispartofseriesIndustrial Engineering Program
dc.relation.ispartofseriesIE 4995 Capstone Design Course
dc.relation.ispartofseriesSpring-2026
dc.rights.holderPolytechnic University of Puerto Rico, Industrial and Systems Engineering Department
dc.rights.licenseAll rights reserved
dc.subject.lcshDrugs--Quality control
dc.subject.lcshManufacturing processes--Quality control
dc.subject.lcshProcess control
dc.subject.lcshPharmaceutical industry--Quality control
dc.subject.lcshSix sigma (Quality control standard)
dc.subject.lcshTablets (Pharmacy)--Defects
dc.subject.otherPolytechnic University of Puerto Rico--Industrial and Systems Engineering Department--Undergraduates--Research--Capstone Design Project
dc.subject.otherPolytechnic University of Puerto Rico--Undergraduates--Posters
dc.subject.otherPolytechnic University of Puerto Rico--Industrial and Systems Engineering Department--Curricula--IE 4995-Capstone Design Course Extension
dc.titleReducing Visual Defect Rates (%) in Concerta Tablets for Fuji Japan Inspection
dc.typePoster

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