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The Not-So-United States of Cold Chain

Who is regulating the movement of temperature-sensitive drugs in America?

Generally, manufacturers protect products when shipping to the wholesalers, but one veteran pharmacist says that’s not always the case on the journey from the specialty pharmacy to the patient, depending on the pharmacy.
Generally, manufacturers protect products when shipping to the wholesalers, but one veteran pharmacist says that’s not always the case on the journey from the specialty pharmacy to the patient, depending on the pharmacy.

If a vaccine goes out of temperature range in a forest, and no one is around to notice, does it make a sound? More importantly, does it get administered to the patient?

The answer to that question may depend on what country the forest is located in. If you’re in America, you may not want to know the answer.

When it comes to eradicating diseases like polio, a critical piece of the puzzle lies in keeping drugs effective, protecting vaccines from exposure to temperature excursions beyond the acceptable range that may damage or destroy them.

While organizations like the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation continue to tackle the challenges of ensuring that temperature-sensitive drugs are handled carefully in developing nations, no single agency in the U.S. has accountability for the safe transport of temperature-sensitive meds.

That’s not to say that drug manufacturers don’t make efforts to ensure successful cold chain distribution. But without standards across the board, a given company may have SOPs ranging from robust to fragmented (to nothing) on moving temperature-sensitive medicines in the last mile.

“The CDC, the VA, HHS, the FDA —no regulatory body owns it,” says Michael Rush, Executive Director of Global Health Policy at Temptime Corporation. The FDA, in concert with the HHS and the CDC, typically deliberates on getting the new drugs to market. They’re focused on the disease states and the safety of products, but not so much on the specifics of distribution. “No agency in the U.S. hands down the rules, so naturally it’s fragmented, unlike the WHO’s centralized top-down strategy.”

Global regulations

Beyond the efforts of non-profits (like the Gates Foundation and PATH), many countries including Indonesia, Pakistan and India have instituted national vaccine vial monitoring requirements. India, in particular, has achieved great results with vial-level monitoring, successfully eradicating polio despite having one of the world’s most challenging cold-chains.

Peru and Brazil have new laws about temperature-sensitive medicines including vaccines and biologics. If an excursion occurs, the Peruvian Ministry of Health is authorized to come and investigate and institute police remediation methods. Because of its perpetually high vaccine wastage rates, Brazil also has ongoing pilots requiring that all temperature-sensitive medicines be shipped via Correios, the Brazilian National Mail Service, on behalf of the Ministry of Health.

And in China, individual provinces are proliferating and implementing vial-level vaccine monitoring requirements through their provincial CDCs for all private sector vaccines distributed by multi-nationals in those provinces – to reduce vaccine wastage and prove to parents and patients that those vaccines remained in safe temperature ranges.

The United States

So if the WHO solved the last-mile challenge 20 years ago by requiring temperature monitors with vaccines, surely things are working properly in the U.S., right?

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