Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

FDA must fast-track COVID-19 vaccine for kids under 12

- Bernard Black and Martin Skladany

If the Food and Drug Administra­tion continues on its current path, a COVID-19 vaccine for children under 12 probably won’t be available until early 2022 — an eternity in this pandemic. Kids infected by the highly contagious delta variant have overwhelme­d children’s hospitals in parts of Florida and Texas. A record number of children — more than 1,900 — are hospitaliz­ed in the U.S.

Unless younger children are vaccinated, more school outbreaks will occur, leading to repeating cycles of closures, quarantine­s and reopenings. Those who have lost one year of school may lose another, with children from low-income families and students of color continuing to suffer the greatest educationa­l losses.

In a letter to the head of the Food and Drug Administra­tion, the American Academy of Pediatrics argued early this month that the FDA can move faster in granting emergency use authorizat­ion, or EUA, for children ages 5 to 11 — without compromisi­ng safety.

Initially, the FDA wanted to review two months of children’s post-vaccinatio­n safety data, the same as was required for EUA for adults. In July, the FDA stated it wanted up to six months of data. The American Academy of Pediatrics says it sees no “biological plausibili­ty for serious adverse” events after two months of children being vaccinated. Evidence gathered from already-vaccinated adults and adolescent­s backs this up.

Moreover, months after Moderna’s and Pfizer’s Phase 3 trials had already started, the FDA demanded doubling the number of children participat­ing in the studies. This will cause further delay for little gain. Greater size isn’t needed to detect common side effects such as injection site soreness and temporary fever.

The more concerning side effects seen in kids 12 to 15 and adults are so uncommon that doubling the size of the trials wouldn’t pick them up. The American Academy of Pediatrics urges the FDA to grant EUA “based on data from the initial enrolled cohort,” and not to wait for the results from the expanded study.

The FDA made these go-slow decisions in pre-delta days, when COVID-19 risk was far lower, and we thought the risk of transmissi­on from children to vaccinated adults was small. But the world has changed. The American Academy of Pediatrics unequivoca­lly says the FDA should not wait to authorize vaccines for children ages 5 to 11 and urges the agency to base the decision on the two months of data that have already been collected.

Rare cases of heart inflammati­on (myocarditi­s and pericardit­is) have been linked to the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine. Researcher­s estimate that for every 1 million second doses given to boys ages 12 to 17, 70 or fewer myocarditi­s cases — mostly mild — could be caused, but 215 hospitaliz­ations and two deaths could be prevented. Risk for girls is even lower.

The rise of the delta variant makes this small risk worth taking, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The FDA should allow EUA to go forward without requiring up to six months of safety data and a significan­t increase in the number of kids in Phase 3 studies. This would permit Pfizer to seek emergency use authorizat­ion for younger children in September, as it had originally planned, and receive authorizat­ion soon after, far before the FDA’s projected “midwinter” date.

Faster authorizat­ion will prevent tens of thousands of child hospitaliz­ations, hundreds of child deaths and, through reduced spread, thousands of adult lives.

The Pfizer vaccine for those 12 and older received full FDA approval this week, which would allow doctors to prescribe it to children under 12 in what is called “offlabel usage.” This could lead to yet another COVID-related health disparity, as the vaccinatio­n advantage is likely to go to the children of parents who have the time and money to seek out physicians offering such vaccinatio­ns.

Extensive off-label vaccinatio­n might not emerge if the FDA speeds up the authorizat­ion process of the vaccine for younger children. Parents who want to wait for more data could still do so — the safety evidence that will emerge from millions of children who would be vaccinated.

Finally, the FDA can move more quickly in reviewing an EUA applicatio­n for ages 5 to 11. Emergency use authorizat­ion is based on the totality of scientific evidence, which includes the evidence on biologic pathways, manufactur­ing quality and side effects that the FDA already possesses from the COVID vaccines authorized for adults. Israel, which has outstandin­g data on the Pfizer vaccine, is pushing the company to quicken the submission of its EUA applicatio­n for children under 12.

When Pfizer’s EUA applicatio­n is submitted, the FDA should convene its advisory panel quickly to greatly shorten the time needed for authorizat­ion. The FDA moved quickly to authorize emergency use of the vaccines for adults in late 2020, and again for children ages 12 to 15 earlier this year. That was the right move in both cases.

If the FDA returned to its original vaccine timeline for kids ages 5 to 11, it would be government responsive­ness at its best.

Bernard Black is a professor of law and finance at Northweste­rn University. He has researched the effect of the pandemic on mortality rates, especially in low-income communitie­s. Martin Skladany is a law professor at Penn State University. His recent work has focused on health disparitie­s. This piece was first published in the Los Angeles Times.

 ?? Erika Schultz/The Seattle Times/TNS ?? The FDA should move quickly on a COVID-19 vaccine for younger children.
Erika Schultz/The Seattle Times/TNS The FDA should move quickly on a COVID-19 vaccine for younger children.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States