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Why IIoT can make the pharma cold chain safer and more efficient

Why IIoT can make the pharma cold chain safer and more efficient

The demands for pharmaceutical cold-chain capacity and compliance are on the rise. The global pharmaceutical industry is growing by 3-6 percent year over year, while temperature-controlled pharmaceutical product sales are growing at double the overall pharmaceutical industry rate. Meanwhile, only a quarter of biopharmaceutical leaders say their companies use temperature and location tracking data to monitor their products in transit. The industrial internet of things (IIoT) and cloud-based data analytics can help create a smarter, safer pharmaceutical cold chain now.

Pharma cold-chain losses and risks

The problem of temperature excursions is widespread. Pharmaceutical manufacturers lose $15 billion per year in product costs due to cold-chain failures, and that doesn’t include resupply and investigation costs. A 2019 Pelican BioThermal pharmaceutical industry survey found that 44.6 percent of respondents said their companies had “multiple temperature excursions” each year, with 41 percent of those excursions taking products four or more degrees outside their proper range.
Product waste drives up prices and can create shortages. Products that reach the market after undetected temperature excursions may be “not only ineffective, but harmful and possibly even life-threatening,” according to a report in the journal Pharmacy and Therapeutics.

More comprehensive temperature control and data collection in transit can help protect products and patients. It’s just a matter of implementing those improvements. Only a quarter of respondents in Pelican’s survey said their companies use these types of tracking now.

Reducing pharma product damage in transit

Equipment malfunctions, waits in exposed locations, delays, and human error can all cause temperature excursions for products that need refrigeration, freezing or protection from freezing. Wireless sensors can detect and report these excursions as soon as they happen. And today’s wireless IIoT sensors are small and cost-effective enough to deploy in product packaging, shipping containers, and vehicles at every stage of transit.
Because wireless sensors can continuously feed data to the cloud, logistics managers can track shipment temperatures from any location on their phones and computers. This eliminates the need to wait for local servers to update databases with input from wired systems. Real-time monitoring systems can also generate alerts when packages or equipment are out of temperature compliance. The alerts allow logistics managers to flag and remove compromised product before it reaches patients.

When temperature sensors are combined with location trackers, the alerts can also pinpoint problem links in the cold chain. That can allow for rapid adjustments to prevent future product damage. These capabilities can reduce the need for product recalls and protect the health of patients…

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