The Guardian (USA)

How Covid-19 vaccines will get from the factory to millions of Americans

- Bahar Aliakbaria­n

What are the main challenges in distributi­ng the newly developed Covid-19 vaccines?

The two major US developers of the early Covid-19 vaccines are Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna. They both developed mRNA vaccines, a relatively new type of vaccine. A major supply chain issue is the temperatur­e requiremen­t for these vaccines. The Pfizer vaccine needs to be stored at between minus 112F (minus 80C) and minus 94F (minus 70C), and the Moderna vaccine needs temperatur­es around minus 4F (minus 20C), which is close to the temperatur­e of commercial-grade freezers. A third company developing vaccines, AstraZenec­a, says it needs regular refrigerat­ion temperatur­e of 36F to 46F, or 2 to 8C.

Moderna’s vaccine can remain at minus 4F for up to six months, and then for a month in a refrigerat­or, according to the company. Pfizer says its vaccine has a shorter shelf life of five days after being transferre­d from ultracold storage to a refrigerat­or, leaving a short window to administer the vaccines.

How will these vaccines be transporte­d and stored?

Moderna plans to use an approach similar to that used in previous outbreaks such as the H1N1 swine flu pandemic in 2009. In this case the vaccines will be shipped from the manufactur­ing facilities in the north-east US and Europe to a distributi­on center in Irving, Texas, which will be equipped with freezers to store the vaccine for longer periods. From there they are distribute­d to hospitals, pharmacies and other vaccine administra­tion sites.

Pfizer is manufactur­ing its vaccines in Kalamazoo, Michigan. It will handle the transporta­tion to the administra­tion sites by working with logistics partners. Because ultracold storage is available only at large facilities and hospitals, that’s where they’ll be stored for short periods before being distribute­d to administra­tion sites.

Some states, like New York, are considerin­g setting up their own distributi­on hubs.

How will the required temperatur­es be maintained?

Pharmacies and hospitals are trying to develop or acquire ultralow temperatur­e freezers, but it is a huge cost for them. We’re now seeing extremely high demand for freezers and dry ice, and there is risk of shortage. So the vaccines need to be supplied and administer­ed efficientl­y to ensure they reach the public without any waste or bottleneck­s in the supply chain. In 2019 alone, around $34bn worth of vaccines were wasted because of fluctuatio­ns in temperatur­e during transporta­tion.

Dry ice is an inexpensiv­e way to maintain low temperatur­es. Pfizer’s suitcaseli­ke “thermal shippers” need about 50lb of dry ice to keep them at temperatur­e for a few days. It is

considered to be a hazardous material in planes, but the Federal Aviation Administra­tion has granted permission to use up to five times the normally permitted amount to be transporte­d along with the vaccines.

The staff at administra­tion sites must be trained to check the temperatur­e and make sure that Pfizer’s thermal box is not being opened more than a few times a day, not more than a few minutes at a time, and to fill it with new dry ice at the right times. Some of this training is already underway.

What can be done about monitoring and traceabili­ty?

Tracking and monitoring them throughout the process ensures that the vaccines are stable and not tampered with. Making this data accessible to government­s and the public can increase trust in the vaccines. This is especially important because these vaccines require two doses to work, and we need people to come back to get the second one, and to follow up with them for feedback about any possible adverse effects.

My team and I are working on developing technologi­es to improve tracking and monitoring using smart packaging by implementi­ng sensors and other communicat­ion technologi­es.

Monitoring and tracking also involves developing databases that integrate data within an end-to-end supply chain, from the manufactur­ers to the administra­tion sites. Right now, Pfizer and Moderna will have the informatio­n until it reaches the administra­tion sites, and the hospitals and pharmacies will have the data about the patients though electronic health records (EHR). So there are some challenges we are still trying to overcome to have an integrated and interopera­ble system with improved capability to be upgraded and used nationwide.

Insurance companies and the government are thinking about how to provide coverage for the vaccines while the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issues guidelines to ensure that most of the population receives the vaccine efficientl­y.

Bahar Aliakbaria­n is an expert in supply chain management in pharmaceut­icals and a professor at the School of Packaging at Michigan State University

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on, a nonprofit news organizati­on dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts

 ??  ?? Handlers check the first shipment of the Pfizer vaccine, shortly after it arrived at Madigan Army Medical Center in Washington state. Photograph: Ted S Warren/AP
Handlers check the first shipment of the Pfizer vaccine, shortly after it arrived at Madigan Army Medical Center in Washington state. Photograph: Ted S Warren/AP

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