The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Could a fourth COVID-19 vaccine shot provide relief?

- By Steve Hendrix Steve Hendrix is Jerusalem bureau chief for the Washington Post.

A fourth shot of the Pfizer-biontech coronaviru­s vaccine generated a fivefold boost in antibodies a week after the shot, according to preliminar­y results of a study made public by the Israeli government.

The findings offer one of the first looks at how effective a second booster shot might be at reducing the health impact of the omicron variant spreading rapidly around the globe.

Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett, in a statement, said the preliminar­y results indicated “a very high likelihood that the fourth dose will protect vaccinated people to a great degree against infection to some degree and against severe symptoms.”

Israel became the first country to launch a major second-booster campaign, making the fourth vaccinatio­n available to anyone 60 and older whose last shot was at least four months ago. Bennett’s office said more than 100,000 Israelis have registered or been vaccinated for their fourth shot in the first two days of the campaign.

Critics had said the move was premature in the absence of data on a second booster’s safety and effectiven­ess. Some researcher­s didn’t rule out that repeat doses of the same vaccine could dampen the body’s immune response.

But the study, conducted by Israel’s Sheba Medical Center, could steer more policymake­rs toward an aggressive booster policy if it holds up to further analysis. Previous research from South Africa and Britain have suggested that omicron, while more infectious than other coronaviru­s variants, is less likely to cause serious illness in fully vaccinated individual­s.

Researcher­s recruited subjects from the first round of Israelis given the second booster shot last month, 150 healthy adult medical workers of all ages. All had received previous doses of the Pfizer vaccine. The study first screened for adverse reactions to the fourth shot but found nothing concerning.

“The fourth shot acted just like the first and second shots,” said Steve Walz, a spokesman for Sheba Medical Center. “A few people had low fevers, a few had sore arms but nothing more than that.”

Last Monday, a week after the boosters were administer­ed, researcher­s began testing each person’s level of coronaviru­s antibodies and found the average five-fold jump. “It’s working,” Walz said. “It seems the fourth vaccine is just as effective.”

Public health officials in Israel said the new findings added welcome informatio­n about the likely effectiven­ess of a fourth Pfizer shot. But some cautioned that the strategy of offering the additional booster was premature.

Hagai Levine, an epidemiolo­gist at Hebrew University and chairman of the Israeli Associatio­n of Public Health Physicians, applauded the government’s decision to offer the booster to those with compromise­d immune systems. But for healthy individual­s, it was still unclear whether the immune effects of the first three Pfizer doses had waned so much that a fourth dose was called for, he said.

“It’s kind of the right answer to the wrong question,” Levine said of the new study results. “That it raises the antibody levels is good news, but first we need to know if there is a need for another shot.”

Soon, Walz, the Sheba spokesman, will be a volunteer in another study in which recipients of previous Pfizer vaccine doses will be injected with a booster shot of the Moderna vaccine.

The research will test a theory that mixing and matching the serums could produce a stronger and/or longer-lasting immune response.

A growing debate

While the news from Israel could provide some relief in the global battle against COVID-19, it has created some debate.

Some experts, for instance, in Israel and internatio­nally, questioned the wisdom of rushing out another round of shots for those who are fully vaccinated when huge numbers of people have yet to be inoculated at all, either by their own choice or because of shortages.

The head of Britain’s lead advisory body on vaccinatio­ns warned that too many booster rounds would divert resources from the broader effort to reach as many people as possible. “We can’t vaccinate the planet every four to six months,” Andrew Pollard, chairman of Britain’s Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunizati­on, said in an interview with the Telegraph.

“It’s not sustainabl­e or affordable. In the future, we need to target the vulnerable.”

 ?? ARIEL SCHALIT/AP ?? Street artists perform for people lined up for COVID-19 tests in Tel Aviv, Israel, last week. Israel’s prime minister says a fourth vaccinatio­n against the omicron variant generates a five-fold increase in antibodies to fight the virus.
ARIEL SCHALIT/AP Street artists perform for people lined up for COVID-19 tests in Tel Aviv, Israel, last week. Israel’s prime minister says a fourth vaccinatio­n against the omicron variant generates a five-fold increase in antibodies to fight the virus.
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Hendrix

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