FDA panel endorses coronavirus boosters for older adults and those at risk of serious illness
Monday, September 20, 2021
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Posted by: Diane Berg
The recommendation is not binding. A decision about boosters
from the FDA is expected by next week.
Source: Washington Post (Log in required)
By: Carolyn Y. Johnson, Laurie McGinley, and Joel Achenbach
September 17, 2021 at
7:00 p.m. EDT
Expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration voted
unanimously Friday to recommend that the agency authorize a booster shot of the
Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine six months after vaccination for people 65
years and older and for anyone at risk for severe illness.
The vote is not binding, and Peter Marks, the FDA official
overseeing coronavirus vaccines, indicated that the final decision could be
slightly different, encompassing people who are at higher risk of infection
because of their professions, such as health-care workers and front-line
employees, including teachers. The advisory committee members were polled on
whether they would agree with making boosters available to people who were at
risk of infection because of workplace exposure, and they all said yes.
A decision about boosters from the FDA is expected by next
week, and a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory committee is
slated to meet Wednesday and Thursday to recommend how a third shot should be
used. The FDA advisory committee, following Pfizer’s lead, recommended that the
third shot be given at least six months after the second.
Friday’s protracted online meeting, the most important FDA
advisory committee meeting since the vaccines were first authorized, gave the
Biden administration and Pfizer some, but not all, of what they wanted.
Boosters will be on the way into many millions of arms — with the exact number
depending on how the FDA and the CDC decide who meets the criteria for being at
high risk of serious illness.
The consideration of booster shots comes as the United
States endures a fourth wave of covid-19 infections, with hospitals in some
corners of the nation confronting the long-feared prospect of rationing care
and having to decide which patients receive access to treatments and medical
equipment. And the debate has sparked criticism from some officials in the
global health community who argue that the U.S. discussion of boosters betrays
selfishness, as many in the world do not have access to a first dose of
vaccine.
The recommendation to target shots primarily to older adults
is far narrower than what the companies and top officials in the Biden
administration had sought: a blanket approval to boost anyone 16 and older. The
panel voted resoundingly against a broadly available booster. Many committee
members said they felt uncomfortable about whether the benefits outweighed the
risks to younger adults, citing the lack of robust safety data.
The meeting then took an unusual turn. The voting question
was reformulated, to ask if members of the committee thought a booster would be
safe and effective for a narrower slice of the population. The panel voted
unanimously yes.
FDA panel endorses coronavirus vaccine boosters only for
older adults and those at high risk
Expert advisers to the Food and Drug Administration on Sept.
17 recommended a coronavirus vaccine booster to people 65 and older and those
at high risk. (The Washington Post)
The vote and the variety of views on display during hours of
debate Friday, even among experts, could complicate the Biden administration’s
effort to extend boosters to all adults beginning next week — and exacerbate
public confusion.
“Today was an important step forward in providing better
protection to Americans from COVID-19,” White House spokesman Kevin Munoz said
in a statement. “We stand ready to provide booster shots to eligible Americans
once the process concludes at the end of next week.”
The committee’s deliberations did not address many of the
questions circulating among the public, including the roughly 81 million people
who have received shots made by Moderna and Johnson & Johnson and whose
eligibility for a booster may not be decided for weeks.
The all-day meeting revealed an array of opinions among
America’s top medical experts on whether boosters are necessary and, if so,
when and for whom.
“It would be great to wait until we have all the data about
safety,” said Jay M. Portnoy, a professor of pediatrics who works at Children’s
Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Mo. “I’d rather not get the covid disease. I’d
rather get the third dose of the vaccine.”
After Pfizer’s initial request for a booster broadly
available to the general population was voted down, the panelists had a
freewheeling discussion about what the age limit should be for getting an
additional shot.
Paul A. Offit, a vaccine expert at the Children’s Hospital
of Philadelphia, said he favored boosters for people age 65 and up, after which
Eric J. Rubin, editor in chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, said,
“I’m 63, so I like the 60 age instead of the 65 age.” Portnoy said he planned
to get his dose next week — and then said he would get one the very next day.
Those divisions extended even within the FDA.
“We know that there may be differing opinions about the
interpretation of the data regarding the potential need for additional doses,
and we strongly encourage all the different viewpoints to be voiced and
discussed regarding the data, which is complex and evolving,” Marks said at the
introduction of the meeting.
Marks, in addressing the panel, showed his hand about his
views without explicitly spelling them out. He noted that many vaccines require
additional doses six months down the line, so it “should not be a surprise” if
the coronavirus vaccines need another dose as well.
He also said many other vaccines are used not just to
prevent severe illness and hospitalizations but also mild cases. And he mentioned
the importance of preventing the spread of the virus to vulnerable populations
such as younger children, for whom a vaccine has not been approved.
Two career FDA scientists who co-authored a highly unusual
paper in the medical journal Lancet this month, arguing that boosters were not
needed in the general population, also asked questions that betrayed their
inclinations. Both have announced that they will soon step down from the
agency.
Phil Krause, one of those FDA officials, asked a pointed
question about some of the data Pfizer is using to support the case for
boosters.
“Part of this, of course, is the difficulty of looking at
this kind of data, without having the chance for FDA to review it or allowing
for this kind of data to go through the peer-review process,” Krause said,
adding that Pfizer was a co-sponsor of the study.
Marion Gruber, the other FDA official, raised the issue of
safety earlier in the meeting, pointing out that the risk of heart inflammation
after vaccination, though rare, is highest among younger males, who may have
different risks and benefits from the vaccine than do older adults.
Some Americans have already found unofficial ways to get
additional vaccine doses, and that number is only expected to increase, experts
said. A third dose is already recommended for people with compromised immune
systems.
Advisory panel members heard presentations from the FDA, the
CDC and Pfizer. The data was often conflicting.
CDC scientist Sara Oliver presented data showing that while
protection against milder infections has waned over time, protection against
severe disease remains robust, even among older adults. She showed unpublished
data that found that through July, adults 75 and older were 88 percent
protected against hospitalization.
But scientists from Israel showed that in their highly
vaccinated population, protective immunity from vaccination had clearly waned
as the country confronted the delta surge this summer. That resulted in a huge
uptick in infections, they found — and in severe cases, even among people who
were fully vaccinated.
The government there decided to implement a booster campaign
at the end of July, beginning with people older than 60, and presented data
suggesting that it may have helped save hospitals from being overwhelmed.
Cases “were doubling every 10 days, and we got to places
with thousands of cases, doubling every 10 days. It was scary,” said Sharon
Alroy-Preis, director of public health services for Israel’s Ministry of
Health. “If we had not started boosters at the end of July, we would have come
to the capacity of Israeli hospitalization capabilities — and gone beyond it.”
One of the studies from Israel, published Wednesday in the
New England Journal of Medicine, showed that people 60 and older who were given
a booster shot had an 11-fold lower risk of contracting an infection than people
who did not receive the additional shot. Research data from Israel’s Ministry
of Health, posted online Wednesday by the FDA in advance of its presentation at
Friday’s advisory committee meeting, also showed that the booster campaign
dramatically lowered the rate of severe cases among people 60 and older.
Pfizer officials have depended heavily on the data from
Israel in making their case that boosters are necessary.
“The Israeli experience could portend the U.S. covid-19
future — and soon,” said William C. Gruber, senior vice president of vaccine
clinical research and development at Pfizer.
The booster issue has been swamped with scientific and
political controversies in recent weeks. Senior Biden administration officials,
worried about data showing a waning of vaccine efficacy, announced in
mid-August that boosters would be available the week of Sept. 20, pending FDA
and CDC sign-offs.
Many scientists were outraged by the decision to make a
political announcement ahead of the scientific confirmation that boosters were
safe, effective and necessary. Those scientific agencies subsequently told the
White House that only the Pfizer-BioNTech product, whose data was the first to
be filed at the agency, could be cleared by then.
Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has spoken forcefully in favor of boosters. In
an interview Thursday with The Washington Post, he said the Israeli data
suggests that a third shot might prevent viral transmission — something that
could help curb the pandemic.
Fauci said some scientists seem to believe “it is okay” for
vaccinated people to get infected as long as they experience only mild or
moderate symptoms and don’t end up in the hospital. But, he said, “as a
clinical person who sees a lot of patients, that isn’t okay,” adding that even
mild infections can result in missed work, disruptions of family life and
potential cases of long covid, with its debilitating effects.
Yasmeen Abutaleb and Lena H. Sun contributed to this report.
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