Kayla Ferraz, Melissa Cato, Emma Fox, Matthew Rawlins, Jeanie Misko
{"title":"Temperature Excursions in Cold Chain Management-Assessing the Accuracy of Refrigerator Temperature Probes.","authors":"Kayla Ferraz, Melissa Cato, Emma Fox, Matthew Rawlins, Jeanie Misko","doi":"10.1177/00185787241282245","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p><b>Background:</b> Medications requiring refrigeration for stability are commonly used across hospitals. Temperature-sensitive medications may not have their temperature requirements maintained due to breaches in the cold chain, especially refrigerator failure. This is usually caused by malfunction of the refrigerator unit or by power outage. After multiple power outages at our institution involving refrigerators with temperature probes located in different areas of the refrigerator, we hypothesised that the fixed temperature probe may not accurately reflect the temperature of the medications themselves. <b>Methods:</b> We conducted simulations of power outages in a commonly used medication refrigerator, using additional temperature data loggers, placed on the refrigerator shelf and inside a cardboard box to replicate the temperature inside medication containers to determine if there was a difference in the time to breach cold chain conditions (>8°C) and to return to appropriate refrigerated temperatures (<8°C) when power was restored. <b>Results:</b> All data loggers took a longer time to breach cold chain conditions than the refrigerator probe (12.5 minutes vs 23-26 minutes) but took longer to return to acceptable temperature after power was restored (17.5 minutes vs 70.5-89 minutes). <b>Conclusion:</b> This exploratory research suggests that temperatures vary within a refrigerator depending on the type and location of probe and that medications within may take longer to breach cold chain conditions but also take longer to return to cold chain conditions compared with fixed refrigerator temperature probes. Further research is required to determine whether these variations occur across different sizes/brands of refrigerators and the effect on stability on refrigerated medications.</p>","PeriodicalId":13002,"journal":{"name":"Hospital Pharmacy","volume":" ","pages":"00185787241282245"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11559836/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Hospital Pharmacy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/00185787241282245","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Medications requiring refrigeration for stability are commonly used across hospitals. Temperature-sensitive medications may not have their temperature requirements maintained due to breaches in the cold chain, especially refrigerator failure. This is usually caused by malfunction of the refrigerator unit or by power outage. After multiple power outages at our institution involving refrigerators with temperature probes located in different areas of the refrigerator, we hypothesised that the fixed temperature probe may not accurately reflect the temperature of the medications themselves. Methods: We conducted simulations of power outages in a commonly used medication refrigerator, using additional temperature data loggers, placed on the refrigerator shelf and inside a cardboard box to replicate the temperature inside medication containers to determine if there was a difference in the time to breach cold chain conditions (>8°C) and to return to appropriate refrigerated temperatures (<8°C) when power was restored. Results: All data loggers took a longer time to breach cold chain conditions than the refrigerator probe (12.5 minutes vs 23-26 minutes) but took longer to return to acceptable temperature after power was restored (17.5 minutes vs 70.5-89 minutes). Conclusion: This exploratory research suggests that temperatures vary within a refrigerator depending on the type and location of probe and that medications within may take longer to breach cold chain conditions but also take longer to return to cold chain conditions compared with fixed refrigerator temperature probes. Further research is required to determine whether these variations occur across different sizes/brands of refrigerators and the effect on stability on refrigerated medications.
背景:需要冷藏以保持稳定的药物在医院中普遍使用。对温度敏感的药物可能会因冷链故障,特别是冰箱故障而无法维持其温度要求。这通常是由冰箱装置故障或停电造成的。在本机构发生的多次停电事故中,冰箱的温度探头位于冰箱的不同区域,因此我们假设固定温度探头可能无法准确反映药物本身的温度。方法:我们在一个常用的药品冰箱中进行了停电模拟,使用额外的温度数据记录器,分别放置在冰箱架子上和一个纸箱内,以复制药品容器内的温度,从而确定从突破冷链条件(>8°C)到恢复到适当的冷藏温度所需的时间是否存在差异(结果:所有数据记录器所需的时间都更长:所有数据记录器破坏冷链条件的时间均长于冰箱探头(12.5 分钟 vs 23-26 分钟),但恢复供电后恢复到可接受温度的时间更长(17.5 分钟 vs 70.5-89 分钟)。结论这项探索性研究表明,冰箱内的温度因探头的类型和位置而异,与固定的冰箱温度探头相比,冰箱内的药品可能需要更长的时间才能突破冷链条件,但也需要更长的时间才能恢复到冷链条件。还需要进一步研究,以确定这些变化是否发生在不同尺寸/品牌的冰箱中,以及对冷藏药品稳定性的影响。
期刊介绍:
Hospital Pharmacy is a monthly peer-reviewed journal that is read by pharmacists and other providers practicing in the inpatient and outpatient setting within hospitals, long-term care facilities, home care, and other health-system settings The Hospital Pharmacy Assistant Editor, Michael R. Cohen, RPh, MS, DSc, FASHP, is author of a Medication Error Report Analysis and founder of The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP), a nonprofit organization that provides education about adverse drug events and their prevention.