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Pfizer says tweaked COVID-19 shots boost omicron protection

- By Lauran Neergaard AP Medical Writer

Pfizer announced Saturday that tweaking its COVID-19 vaccine to better target the omicron variant is safe and works — just days before regulators debate whether to offer Americans updated booster shots this fall.

The vaccines currently used in the U.S. still offer strong protection against severe COVID-19 disease and death -especially if people have gotten a booster dose. But those vaccines target the original coronaviru­s strain and their effectiven­ess against any infection dropped markedly when the super-contagious omicron mutant emerged.

Now with omicron's even more transmissi­ble relatives spreading widely, the Food and Drug Administra­tion is considerin­g ordering a recipe change for the vaccines made by both Pfizer and rival Moderna in hopes that modified boosters could better protect against another COVID-19 surge expected this fall and winter.

Pfizer and its partner Biontech studied two different ways of updating their shots -targeting just omicron, or a combinatio­n booster that adds omicron protection to the original vaccine. They also tested whether to keep today's standard dosage -- 30 micrograms -or to double the shots' strength.

In a study of more than 1,200 middle-aged and older adults who'd already had three vaccine doses, Pfizer said both booster approaches spurred a substantia­l jump in omicronfig­hting antibodies.

“Based on these data, we believe we have two very strong omicronada­pted candidates,”

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said in a statement.

Pfizer's omicrononl­y booster sparked the strongest immune response against that variant.

But many experts say combinatio­n shots may be the best approach because they would retain the proven benefits of the original COVID-19 vaccine while adding new protection against omicron. And Pfizer said a month after people received its combo shot, they had a 9 to 11-fold increase in omicron-fighting antibodies. That's more than 1.5 times better than another dose of the original vaccine.

And importantl­y, preliminar­y lab studies show the tweaked shots also produce antibodies capable of fighting omicron's geneticall­y distinct relatives named BA.4 and BA.5, although those levels weren't nearly as high.

Moderna recently announced similar results from tests of its combinatio­n shot, what scientists call a “bivalent”

vaccine.

The studies weren't designed to track how well updated boosters prevented COVID-19 cases. Nor is it clear how long any added protection would last.

But the FDA'S scientific advisers will publicly debate the data on Tuesday, as they grapple with whether to recommend a change to the vaccines' recipes -- ahead of similar decisions by other countries.

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