The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

NEW SHINGLES VACCINE: WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW

Waiting list grows for improved injection regimen.

- By Lena H. Sun

A national shortage of a new and more effective vaccine to protect adults over 50 from the painful rash known as shingles is prompting retailers to create waiting lists and the manufactur­er to delay additional promotion.

Shingrix, licensed in the fall by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, is the preferred vaccine recommende­d by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for protection from a disease that affects 1 in 3 adults in their lifetime. By recommendi­ng that healthy adults start receiving the vaccine at age 50 - a decade earlier than the previous recommenda­tion - federal health officials are hoping that millions more people will be protected from shingles, which is caused by the reactivati­on of the same virus that causes chickenpox.

The new two-dose vaccine provides greater protection -more than 90 percent — and lasts longer than the older single-shot vaccine that has been in use since 2006. The CDC recommends that people should get the new vaccine if they have had shingles, have previously received the old vaccine, or have had or are unsure if they have had chickenpox. There are an estimated 1 million cases of shingles in the United States each year; the risk of diseases increases as people age.

Since the new vaccine became broadly available in the U.S. earlier this year, demand has soared. Supply has not kept pace. Manufactur­er GlaxoSmith­Kline “implemente­d order limits and providers have experience­d

shipping delays,” according to a note posted on the CDC’s vaccine shortage list earlier this month. Even though GSK is working to increase supply, those order limits and shipping delays will continue through 2018, the note said. CDC began reporting shortages in early May.

The scarce supply of Shingrix is likely to be mentioned at a regularly scheduled meeting Wednesday of the federal panel that advises the CDC on immunizati­ons.

Drugstore chain CVS said it began offering the vaccine to patients broadly in midMarch. But because of high demand, “it has become challengin­g to keep an ample supply across all of our more than 9,800 stores due to supply restrictio­ns from the manufactur­er,” said CVS spokeswoma­n Amy Lanctot. “We are still getting shipments intermitte­ntly,” she wrote. She said patients should call their local store to find out if the vaccine is in stock.

People who called their CVS pharmacies in recent weeks and were put on hold were likely to hear a recorded message about the new vaccine, saying that it is up to 97 percent effective and recommende­d for adults over 50. “Talk to your pharmacy team today,” the message says.

Like other providers, the Kaiser Permanente health system said it has also experience­d “high demand” since May. Physicians and pharmacist­s have been working to “provide vaccine to members most at risk, according to CDC guidelines,” a spokeswoma­n said.

GSK spokesman Sean Clements said officials are seeing immunizati­on rates “many times that of previous years,” leading to “extremely high” demand for the vaccine. Since Shingrix became available at the end of October, more than 1.5 million people have received at least one dose as of early May, he said.

The company is shipping more doses this week, he said. The manufactur­er is increasing the U.S. supply available for 2018, and plans to release doses to all customer types on a consistent and predictabl­e schedule for the remainder of the year.

He declined to disclose how many doses of vaccine GSK had planned to bring to market this year. For the first quarter of the year, Shingrix had a “strong and fast start” and earned over $150 million, company officials said during an earnings call in April. Officials suggested annual revenue of about $600 million for the vaccine.

The company relied on historical demand for shingles vaccine to predict demand for the new vaccine, Clements said. The company has informed CDC and FDA that there is enough supply to vaccinate more patients in 2018 than were vaccinated against shingles during 2017.

The CDC recommenda­tion is for two doses of Shingrix, two to six months apart. For patients who received both doses, Shingrix is 97 percent effective against shingles for those ages 50 to 59, compared with about 70 percent effectiven­ess for the older vaccine, Zostavax, industry-sponsored data show. For those in their 60s, the new vaccine is 97 percent effective, compared with 64 percent for Zostavax. For those in their 70s, Shingrix is 91 percent effective, compared with about 41 percent for Zostavax. (Data have not been provided for the effectiven­ess of a single dose of Shingrix.)

For those in their 80s, who are most at risk of developing complicati­ons from shingles, the new vaccine is about five times more effective: 91 percent vs. 18 percent. Protection stays above 85 percent for at least the first four years after vaccinatio­n.

Each dose costs $140. Most private health insurance covers recommende­d adult vaccines, including shingles vaccine. All Medicare Part D plans cover the shingles vaccine. But depending on the plan, individual­s may need to pay a portion of the total cost.

Unlike the older Zostavax, which is injected under the skin, the new vaccine is supposed to be a shot in the muscle of the upper arm, like the annual flu vaccine. That difference has apparently led to some errors in giving the vaccine. During the four-month period from October to February, of 155 reports about problems associated with the vaccine, 13 instances involved at least one error, according to a CDC report last month.

Nine involved Shingrix being given under the skin instead of in the muscle; eight of those nine injections caused reactions such as pain, redness, and itching at the injection site.

The remaining 142 reports were patients reporting temporary side effects, such as joint pain, flulike symptoms, headaches, fatigue and soreness in the upper arm.

GSK said it is focusing its efforts on educating providers and pharmacist­s to stress the importance of twodose compliance, and holding off on additional promotion, such as television commercial­s, until the shortage is under control.

“We want to make sure there is the right level of things out there for education, making sure we’re not driving excessive demand when we have to catch up with supply,” Clements said.

‘It has become challengin­g to keep an ample supply across all of our more than 9,800 stores.’

Amy Lanctot CVS spokeswoma­n

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 ?? TED S. WARREN / AP FILE ?? The new shingles vaccine, unlike the older Zostavax, is injected into the muscle of the upper arm. Two injections of Shingrix, from two to six months apart, are 97 percent effective against shingles for people in the 50-59 age bracket, compared with 70 percent for the old vaccine.
TED S. WARREN / AP FILE The new shingles vaccine, unlike the older Zostavax, is injected into the muscle of the upper arm. Two injections of Shingrix, from two to six months apart, are 97 percent effective against shingles for people in the 50-59 age bracket, compared with 70 percent for the old vaccine.

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