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Experts are now boosting boosters

Change comes after emergence of new omicron variant

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

As recently as last week, many public health experts were fiercely opposed to the Biden administra­tion’s campaign to roll out booster shots of the coronaviru­s vaccines to all American adults. There was little scientific evidence to support extra doses for most people, the researcher­s said.

The omicron variant has changed all that.

Scientists do not yet know with any certainty whether the virus is easier to spread or less vulnerable to the body’s immune response. But with dozens of new mutations, the variant seems likely to evade the protection from vaccines to some significan­t degree.

Booster shots clearly raise antibody levels, strengthen­ing the body’s defenses against infection, and may help offset whatever advantages omicron has gained through evolution.

Many of the experts who were opposed to boosters now believe that the shots may offer the best defense against the new variant. The extra doses may slow the spread, at least, buying time for vaccine makers to develop an omicron-specific formulatio­n, if needed.

“Based on what we know about the potential for immune evasion, I would err on the side of giving the booster,” said Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist at Bellevue Hospital Center who had opposed the Biden administra­tion’s boosters-for-all push.

The administra­tion isn’t waiting for scientific consensus. Alarmed by the preliminar­y reports about omicron, officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on

Monday that all American adults should receive booster shots.

The first confirmed omicron infection in the United States was reported Wednesday in San Francisco, in a traveler who returned to California from South Africa on Nov. 22. The individual had been fully vaccinated — but had not received a booster — and showed mild symptoms that were said to be improving.

The omicron variant, first identified in southern Africa, has been discovered in at least 20 countries, and the World Health Organizati­on has warned that the risk posed by the virus is “very high.”

After news of the variant’s spread in South Africa, countries around the world have curtailed air travel to and from southern Africa.

Omicron carries more than 50 genetic mutations, more than 30 of them on the virus’s spike, a protein on its surface. Vaccines train the body’s immune defenses to target and attack these spikes.

Until now, experts like Gounder had argued that while the vaccines’ potency against infection with the delta variant seemed to be waning, they still shielded most people from severe illness, hospitaliz­ation and death. Booster doses should be recommende­d only for adults older than 65 and those who are in long-term care facilities or have weak immune systems, they said.

If delta were the only threat, boosters would still not be warranted, Gounder and other researcher­s said. But omicron may be a more formidable foe.

“If it is highly resistant to antibodies, which seems likely but unproven, then additional doses are appropriat­e,” said John Moore, a virologist at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.

“I’d like to see more data, but it won’t do anybody any harm to have additional protection.”

Greater support for boosters among scientists may eventually complicate efforts to deliver limited supplies of the coronaviru­s vaccines to poor countries. The World Health Organizati­on has said for months, long before omicron’s appearance, that the clamor for extra doses in rich countries was robbing poorer nations of the first doses they desperatel­y need.

Despite the WHO’s designatio­n of omicron as a high risk, the organizati­on has

not changed its position on boosters.

“Right now, there is no evidence that I’m aware of that would suggest that boosting the entire population is going to necessaril­y provide any greater protection to otherwise healthy individual­s against hospitaliz­ation or death,” Dr. Mike Ryan, a director at the WHO, said at a news conference on Wednesday.

He and other scientists have said that the unchecked spread of the coronaviru­s through largely unvaccinat­ed population­s, like those in Africa, is likely to give rise to variants like omicron.

Not all experts are lining up in support of booster shots.

The push for extra doses is predicated on the idea that antibodies are the central aspect of immunity, a false perspectiv­e that overlooks the importance of other parts of the immune system in preventing severe illness and death, said Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia and an adviser to the Food and Drug Administra­tion.

He said he would be more worried if vaccinated people infected with the omicron variant were hospitaliz­ed in droves. But limited evidence to date suggests that the vaccines still prevent severe illness, he said.

“That’s always been true — it’s been true for the first three variants, and it’s likely to be true here,” he said. “If you’re setting the goal as protection against mild illness, then we’re going to be boosting until the day we die.”

 ?? DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Biden receives a COVID-19 booster. Experts think boosters may offer the best defense against the omicron variant.
DOUG MILLS/THE NEW YORK TIMES President Biden receives a COVID-19 booster. Experts think boosters may offer the best defense against the omicron variant.

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