Any shipment without temperature control can compromise the effects of pharmaceuticals
In Germany, anyone who does not monitor and control the temperature at which pharmaceuticals are transported runs the risk every day of the year that a product will lose its effectiveness during transit. We investigated why this is so and how high the risk is in several nationwide series of tests. We displays the result of its evaluation every day in relation to the current daily temperatures on our website. Regardless of the time of day and whether the shipment is transported in summer or winter, there is no outside temperature at which pharmaceuticals without temperature control can be maintained within the room temperature range of 15 to 25 degrees without risk. The lowest risk is at an outside temperature of 16 degrees. Here, the likelihood of a consignment being transported in a vehicle without temperature control at below 15 or above 25 degrees Celsius on delivery is 16 %. Above and below this temperature the risk increases sharply (see graph).
In our experience, senders of pharmaceuticals requiring refrigeration know very well how easily their sensitive products can leave the prescribed range of 2 to 8 degrees Celsius without appropriate temperature control in the supply chain and lose their effectiveness as a result. To prevent this from happening, they employ the services of trans-o-flex subsidiary ThermoMed. But in the room temperature range of 15 to 25 degrees Celsius created for other medicines, the risk is still underestimated today. This is why we wanted to use data collected in practice to show how high the risk actually is. To this end, we started extensive series of measurements in different seasons. During the measurement periods, delivery vehicles were equipped with temperature loggers at 17 trans-o-flex sites distributed across Germany. Three operational scenarios were tested at each site: an intercity route, a city route and a mixed route. The measuring instruments used (temperature loggers) recorded the temperature every 15 minutes with an accuracy of 0.5 degrees Celsius and stored it together with the time and date of the measurement. A total of 152,920 readings were taken in this way during the test periods. Each of these temperature values was related to the outside temperature that was simultaneously recorded at a measuring station of the German Weather Service that was closest to the vehicle. To reduce the evaluation effort, we concentrated our analysis on 40,151 readings, which were collected between 8 am and 4 pm Monday to Friday.
Temperature alarm: service quantifies risk of non-temperature-controlled deliveries
The time periods were selected because the delivery vehicles are usually on the road during these times. On the basis of this data, our IT department has developed the Temperature Alarm website tool. This means everyone can now quantify the risk of non-temperature-controlled shipments. The Temperature Alarm service on our website trans-o-flex.com (see right orange box) provides daily details of the maximum and minimum temperatures to be expected and the corresponding risk of a consignment being transported in a vehicle without temperature control at more than 25 degrees or below 15 degrees.
With an outside temperature of 23 degrees, more than 50 degrees on the load bed
The test results clearly show that there is no significant risk on any day. The study also confirmed several general findings. Firstly, the temperature in the loading space of a vehicle without temperature control follows the rise in outside temperatures during the course of the day without any significant time delay. Secondly, the loading space does not heat up slowly and in parallel with the increase in the external temperature, but the interior temperature increases in some cases exponentially to the external temperature. Even at an outside temperature of 16 degrees, 10 % of all measurements in the loading space indicated temperatures of more than 25 degrees. This means that even at normal outside temperatures there are considerable deviations if actively temperature-controlled vehicles are not used. With an outside temperature of 23 degrees Celsius, peak temperatures of more than 50 degrees Celsius were measured in the vehicles, with an outside temperature of 30 degrees Celsius even more than 60 degrees Celsius. According to the findings of our study, the colour of a vehicle is not a decisive factor in how much a vehicle heats up. On average, the differences between white and anthracite coloured vehicles only made a difference of one or two degrees.
Further studies have shown that, in addition to the temperature inside the vehicles, the temperature in the warehouses also poses a high risk for the shipment of medicines. Without active control and countermeasures, the temperature in conventional distribution centres rises continuously throughout the day. Measurements show that the temperature peak is not reached at midday, but in the late afternoon – exactly at the time when customers’ shipments arrive. Once the heating process has started, the large mass of the buildings means that a rise in temperature, for example above the 25-degree limit of the room temperature range, cannot be prevented at short notice without active air conditioning. Cooling has to start early, usually in the morning. And to know exactly when and how much intervention is required, continuous measurement, documentation and evaluation of temperature logs is necessary.