The pharmaceutical industry has been shifting towards the application of mechanistic modeling to improve process robustness, enable scale-up, and reduce time to market. Modeling approaches have been well-developed for processes such as roller compaction, a continuous dry granulation process. Several mechanistic models/approaches have been documented with limited application to high drug-loaded formulations. In this study, the Johanson model was employed to optimize roller compaction processing and guide its scale-up for a high drug loaded formulation. The model was calibrated using a pilot-scale Minipactor and was validated for a commercial-scale Macropactor. Global sensitivity analysis (GSA) was implemented to determine the impact of process parameter variations (roll force, gap, speed) on a quality attribute [solid fraction (SF)]. The throughput method, which estimates SF values of ribbons using granule production rate, was also studied. The model predicted SF values for all 14 Macropactor batches within ± 0.04 SF. The throughput method estimated SF with ± 0.06 SF for 7 out of 11 batches. GSA confirmed that roll force had the largest impact on SF. This case study represents a process modeling approach to build quality into the products/processes and expands the use of mechanistic modeling during drug product development.