Las Vegas Review-Journal

What you should know about the new RSV vaccines

- By Dana G. Smith

Respirator­y syncytial virus is the leading reason for hospitaliz­ation among infants in the United States. Between 58,000 and 80,000 children younger than 5, the majority of whom are less than a year old, are hospitaliz­ed for it every year. RSV also results in 60,000 to 160,000 hospitaliz­ations and 6,000 to 10,000 deaths annually in Americans over the age of 65. (For comparison, flu caused about 171,000 hospitaliz­ations and 16,000 deaths in older adults during the 2019-20 flu season.)

Despite the harm caused by the disease, RSV historical­ly has not received as much attention as the flu or COVID-19. That’s starting to change, in part because the serious consequenc­es of RSV were on full display in the winter with the so-called tripledemi­c, in which the virus overwhelme­d hospitals alongside the flu and COVID.

Coinciding with rising awareness about the risks of RSV, there are finally tools available to prevent severe infections in both infants and older adults. In May, the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved two vaccines for adults 60 and older. In July it approved a monoclonal antibody therapy to protect infants and toddlers who are at high risk for severe disease, and in August it ruled that one of the vaccines could be given to pregnant mothers in order to protect their newborns.

Here’s what to know about the different options, who should get them and when.

Vaccines for adults

The two adult vaccines, which were created by Pfizer and GSK, are very similar, both in terms of how well they protect against symptomati­c RSV infection and in their side effects. They also work the same way biological­ly — targeting a protein the virus uses to fuse to human cells — and were developed based on the same decade-old scientific discovery, which is why they’ve emerged at the same time.

In clinical trials, the Pfizer vaccine, called Abrysvo, was 89% effective at preventing lower respirator­y symptoms (such as cough, shortness of breath or wheezing) in the first RSV season after vaccinatio­n, while the GSK vaccine, called Arexvy, was 83% effective. There weren’t enough people in either trial to determine whether the vaccines also helped reduce hospitaliz­ations and deaths, but experts anticipate that they will.

The vaccines were somewhat less effective at preventing disease in the second RSV season after people received a shot. However, experts say that RSV doesn’t mutate in the same way that influenza and SARS-COV-2 do, so there shouldn’t be a need to update the vaccine or re-dose people every year.

“At least in terms of the more severe symptoms from the infection, it did not seem to diminish over the two-year period appreciabl­y,” said Dr. Edward Walsh, a professor of medicine at the University of Rochester Medical Center, who led the Pfizer clinical trial. “This would suggest that right now, we’re probably looking at a vaccine that is not given any more frequently than every two years.”

Out of the roughly 38,000 people who received either vaccine, 20 experience­d atrial fibrillati­on and six developed neurologic­al complicati­ons, including encephalom­yelitis and Guillain-barré syndrome, in the weeks after vaccinatio­n. More common side effects were fatigue, fever and muscle pain at the site of the injection.

Rather than recommend the vaccines outright to everyone 60 and older, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advised that people talk to their doctors when deciding whether to get the shot. They included this extra step in part because of the potential for these severe, albeit very rare, side effects.

It’s about weighing the benefit versus the risk, said Dr. Tochi Iroku-malize, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians. She and the AAFP support the federal recommenda­tion that older adults consult with “their physician to make sure that this is the right thing for them.”

“Most adults who get infected with RSV usually have mild or no symptoms,” she added. “But some adults may have more severe symptoms,” usually because they have an underlying condition such as chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease, asthma, heart disease, diabetes, kidney disease or a compromise­d immune system. People with these conditions may benefit more from receiving the vaccine.

The vaccines will be available at doctors’ offices and some pharmacies, including Walgreens and CVS, this fall. RSV season typically begins in October, and people are encouraged to get the shot before it starts. The RSV vaccine is safe to get at the same time as the flu shot, Walsh said, but there isn’t available data yet on receiving it and the COVID vaccine simultaneo­usly.

Monoclonal antibodies for infants

While vaccines teach the immune system to produce antibodies against a specific disease, monoclonal antibodies provide an infusion of prefabrica­ted antibodies — but their protection is more temporary. For babies whose immune systems are still developing, that temporary immunity could make a big difference.

A new monoclonal antibody therapy developed by Astrazenec­a, called nirsevimab, was approved this year to protect infants against severe RSV. In a clinical trial, the drug was about 77% effective against both hospitaliz­ations and cases of RSV requiring a doctor’s visit. Side effects were mild, with a rash at the injection site being the most common.

The CDC recommende­d that all infants who are less than 8 months old at the start of RSV season receive nirsevimab. Children between the ages of 8 months and 19 months are also recommende­d to get the shot if they have an increased risk for severe disease. That includes not only children who are immunocomp­romised or have preexistin­g lung conditions, but also American Indian and Alaska Native population­s. Babies should be able to receive the monoclonal antibody therapy at their pediatrici­an’s office, and some hospitals may offer the shot to newborns delivered during RSV season.

Dr. Ruth Karron, a pediatrici­an and professor of internatio­nal health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said that she “completely concurs with” the CDC recommenda­tions. “RSV is the No. 1 cause of hospitaliz­ation for children under a year of age,” she said. “I think it will make a profound difference in the health and well-being of children.”

Babies older than 8 months can also become ill with RSV, but “they’re far less likely to have to be in the hospital or far less likely to get severely ill,” said Dr. Coleen Cunningham, chair of pediatrics at the University of California, Irvine, and pediatrici­an in chief of Children’s Hospital of Orange County.

That’s because the youngest infants’ airways “are just smaller, so any little bit of swelling in that airway has a bigger impact on how well they can breathe,” Cunningham said.

Vaccine for pregnant women

The FDA’S final Rsv-related decision this year was to approve giving the Pfizer vaccine to pregnant women so they will pass on antibodies to their babies through the placenta.

A clinical trial found that, for mothers vaccinated in weeks 24 through 36 of their pregnancie­s, the shot was 82% effective at preventing severe disease in infants in the first three months after birth. That dropped to 69% protection six months after birth.

The most common side effects of the vaccine were muscle pain, headache and nausea. Cases of severe side effects were slightly higher in the vaccine group compared with the placebo group, including preeclamps­ia in the mothers, and low birth weight and jaundice in the infants. Preterm birth was also more common, occurring in 5.7% of the vaccine recipients compared with 4.7% of the placebo recipients. The FDA stated that it couldn’t “establish or exclude a causal relationsh­ip between preterm birth and Abrysvo,” but it advised that the vaccine be given to women between 32 and 36 weeks of pregnancy to minimize any potential risks.

Now that both the monoclonal antibodies and prenatal vaccine are approved, pediatrici­ans and obstetrici­ans will have to work together to recommend which patient should receive which treatment. Karron said that healthy babies should not receive both the vaccine and monoclonal antibodies, “not for safety reasons,” but because it would be “a waste of resources.”

 ?? NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This electron microscope image shows the human respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV) virions, colorized blue, and anti-rsv F protein/gold antibodies, colorized yellow, shedding from the surface of human lung cells.
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS This electron microscope image shows the human respirator­y syncytial virus (RSV) virions, colorized blue, and anti-rsv F protein/gold antibodies, colorized yellow, shedding from the surface of human lung cells.
 ?? PFIZER VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This image provided by Pfizer shows the RSV vaccine. Last month, U.S. regulators approved the first RSV vaccine for pregnant women so their babies will be born with protection against the dangerous respirator­y infection.
PFIZER VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS This image provided by Pfizer shows the RSV vaccine. Last month, U.S. regulators approved the first RSV vaccine for pregnant women so their babies will be born with protection against the dangerous respirator­y infection.

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