The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

More questions for J&J vaccine boosters ahead of FDA review

- By Matthew Perrone and Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Administra­tion is wrestling with whether and when to offer another dose of the single-shot Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, while a new study out Wednesday raises the prospect that using a different brand as the booster might work better.

What happened

In an online review posted Wednesday, FDA scientists didn’t reach a firm conclusion about whether there’s enough evidence for J&J boosters, citing shortcomin­gs with the company’s data and little informatio­n on protection against the extra-contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s.

Why it matters

The review comes ahead of meetings Thursday and Friday when an FDA advisory panel will recommend whether to back booster doses of both the J&J and Moderna vaccines. That’s one step in the government’s vaccine review process: Next week, the FDA will make a final decision on authorizin­g those boosters and then the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will debate who actually should get them.

Adding to the complexity is whether it’s OK to use a booster that’s a different brand than someone’s initial shots. Preliminar­y results of a U.S. government study suggest that mixing and matching boosters will work at least as well — and maybe far better for J&J recipients. Those people had a stronger immune response if they got either a Moderna or Pfizer shot as their booster than if they received another dose of the J&J vaccine, according to results posted online Wednesday. Mixand-match is also up for discussion by the FDA panel this week.

Health authoritie­s say all the vaccines used in the U.S. continue to provide strong protection against severe disease or death from COVID-19. But amid signs that protection against milder infections may be waning, the government already has cleared booster doses of the Pfizer vaccine for certain people starting at six months after their last shot.

Aiming for uniform recommenda­tions, Moderna likewise asked the FDA to clear its booster dose at six months. But J&J complicate­d the decision by proposing a second shot over a range of two to six months.

FDA reviewers wrote that a study of the two-month booster plan suggests “there may be a benefit,” while pointing to only small numbers of people who got another shot at six months instead.

What it means

Overall, the J&J vaccine “still affords protection against severe COVID-19 disease and death,” the FDA’S reviewers concluded. But data about its effectiven­ess “are consistent­ly less” than the protection seen with Pfizer and Moderna shots.

For its part, J&J filed data with the FDA from a real-world study showing its vaccine remains about 80% effective against hospitaliz­ations in the U.S.

J&J’S single-dose vaccine was highly anticipate­d for its one-anddone formulatio­n. But its rollout was hurt by a series of troubles including manufactur­ing problems and some rare but serious side effects including a blood clot disorder anda neurologic­al reaction called Guillain-barre syndrome. In both cases, regulators decided the shot’s benefits outweighed those risks.

Rival drugmakers Pfizer and Moderna have provided the vast majority of U.S. COVID-19 vaccines. More than 170 million Americans have been fully vaccinated with those companies’ two-dose shots while less than 15 million Americans got the J&J shot.

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