Dayton Daily News

Drug companies plan for likely booster shots

- Remy Tumin

Scientists have long said that giving people a single course of a COVID-19 vaccine might not be sufficient in the long term, and that booster shots and even annual vaccinatio­ns might prove necessary.

In recent days, that propositio­n has begun to sound less hypothetic­al.

Vaccine-makers are getting a jump-start on possible new rounds of shots, although they sound more certain of the need for boosters than independen­t scientists have.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said Thursday a third dose of the company’s COVID19 vaccine was “likely” to be needed within a year of the initial two-dose inoculatio­n — followed by annual vaccinatio­ns.

Dr. David Kessler, who runs the Biden administra­tion’s vaccine effort, told a House subcommitt­ee Thursday that the government was also looking ahead. One factor at play is the spread of coronaviru­s variants and whether further vaccinatio­n could better target mutant strains.

Bourla said that “a likely scenario” is “a third dose somewhere between six and 12 months, and from there it would be an annual re-vaccinatio­n.”

Moderna said this week that it was at work on a booster for its vaccine, and Johnson & Johnson has said that its single-shot vaccine will probably need to be given annually.

Kessler emphasized the “strong efficacy” of the current vaccines, including against the variants, but said that the government was “taking steps to develop the next generation of vaccines that are directed against these variants if in fact they can be more effective.”

He was one of a handful of top federal health officials at the House hearing who implored Americans to get vaccinated and sought to reassure the nation that all three federally authorized vaccines are safe. They said little about restarting Johnson & Johnson shots, which the Food and Drug Administra­tion paused to examine a rare blood-clotting disorder.

Late Thursday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said it had scheduled a new emergency hearing for April 23.

As of Thursday, more than 125 million people in the country had received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, including about 78 million who have been fully vaccinated.

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