Bangkok Post

Experts support spaced-out Covid jabs

-

Experts at the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) gave cautious backing to a move already taken by some countries to delay giving out the second jabs of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronaviru­s vaccine.

Faced with limited supplies of the vaccines, Denmark and Britain have both said they would wait for longer than the recommende­d 21-28 days between jabs so they could focus on giving more people their first dose.

The WHO’s vaccine advisory group said the jabs could be administer­ed a few weeks beyond the recommende­d 21-28 days in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

However, there is no data confirming the safety and efficacy of doing so.

The WHO granted emergency validation to the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine last Thursday, paving the way for countries worldwide to give swift approval to its import and distributi­on.

The vaccine was the first to receive the WHO’s nod since the novel coronaviru­s broke out in China a year ago.

The jab is administer­ed in two doses, but the WHO’s Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on Immunisati­on (Sage) said on Tuesday that the second one could be delayed, in order to allow more people to benefit from the first.

“Sage recommends the administra­tion of two doses of this vaccine within 21 to 28 days,” the group’s chair Alejandro Cravioto told a virtual news conference.

But he added that “countries in exceptiona­l circumstan­ces of vaccine supply constraint­s and epidemiolo­gic settings” could delay the administra­tion of the second dose.

Kate O’Brien, director of the WHO’s immunisati­on department, said the delay should not exceed six weeks, based on the “outer limit” of clinical trials.

Sage also recommende­d that the vaccine only be administer­ed in settings that can deal with a potential anaphylact­ic reaction.

It said it could not recommend its use during pregnancy or breastfeed­ing without seeing further safety data from US pharmaceut­icals giant Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech.

BioNTech warned earlier on Tuesday that there was no data backing the safety and efficacy of delaying the second shot beyond three weeks.

BioNTech said its clinical data showing 95% efficacy was based on a two-dose schedule separated by 21 days.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand