Journal article

Use of cool water packs to prevent freezing during vaccine transportation at the country level

OBJECTIVES:

To study the impact of the use of cool water packs (water packs refrigerated at 2 to 8 degrees C) on the cold life of vaccine transport boxes and the shelf life of the vaccines.

METHODS:

Data loggers were used to measure the temperatures of vaccine shipments with cool water packs in laboratory studies and country evaluations. The temperature recordings were mathematically translated into reduction of vaccines shelf life, which are illustrated through degrees of color changes of Vaccine Vial Monitors.

FINDINGS:

Laboratory studies at extreme ambient temperatures (43 degrees C) showed that, with the use of cool water packs, temperatures inside the cold box rise to around 20 degrees C within 48 h. When this exposure scenario was repeated four times, the impact of the temperature history on the different heat stability categories of vaccines varied between 2.4 and 36.0% shelf life loss. Oral polio vaccine was found to be the most affected vaccine. All other vaccines were affected with 2.4 to 10.4% life loss. Country assessments (real life situation with temperature variations between day and night) showed between 0.4% to 4.6% life loss when the boxes were exposed to ambient temperatures ranging from 11.7 to 39.8 degrees C over the 98 h 15 min test period.

CONCLUSIONS:

The use of cool water packs is found to be a legitimate and safe practice for vaccines other than oral polio vaccine, so that cool water packs can safely replace frozen icepacks without any serious consequences on the ability of vaccines to confer protection against disease.

Languages

  • English

Journal

PDA Journal of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology

Volume

1

Type

Journal article

Categories

  • Supply chain & logistics

Topic references

FREEZE-PREVENTION-EXAMPLES

TitleAuthorYearTypeLanguage
Evaluation of an outside-the-cold-chain vaccine delivery strategy in remote regions of western ChinaRen Q, Xiong H, Li Y, Xu R, Zhu C2009Journal articleEnglish
Evidence of Vaccine Freezing in the Cold Chain: Literature ReviewPATH2003RepositoryEnglish
Frequent exposure to suboptimal temperatures in vaccine cold-chain system in India: results of temperature monitoring in 10 statesAmbujam Nair Kapoor, Balraj Singh, Devegowda Ravishankar, Kalyanranjan Mukhopadhyay, Kamlesh Parmar, Karumanagounder Kolanda Swamy, Manoj V. Murhekar, Pramit Ghosh, Raja Dodum, Rajesh Sisodiya, Ramaratnam Subramanian, Sailaja Bitragunta, Somorjit Ningombam, Srihari Dutta, Tana Takum, Varsha SinghJournal articleEnglish
Investigating cold-chain system and efficacy of vaccines reaching the end user in Turkey and related regulationsA. Yekta Özer, Hamza ÖzdemirJournal articleEnglish
Use of cool water packs to prevent freezing during vaccine transportation at the country levelBirhan Altay, Denis Maire, Peter Bollen, Serge Ganivet, Stephane Guichard, Umit Kartoglu, Venkat AiyerJournal articleEnglish
Visual Indicators on Vaccine Boxes as Early Warning Tools to Identify Potential Freeze DamageDiane Tipping, Jillian Wood, Maria C. Chernock, Ronald Angoff2015Journal articleEnglish

Added by: Joseph Little

Added on: 2023-07-04 02:50:22

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