The Boston Globe

CDC panel backs more COVID shots

In 11-1 vote, it says those over 65 should get another round

- By Adam Piore GLOBE STAFF

Americans over the age of 65 should receive a second dose of the booster shot it recommende­d in September, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory panel voted Wednesday, noting that the extra protection has likely already begun to wane.

The 11 to 1 vote, with one abstention, by the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices, followed several hours of presentati­ons from leading epidemiolo­gists, doctors, and public health officials reviewing the latest data on infection rates, hospitaliz­ations, and vaccine effectiven­ess.

Unlike influenza and other diseases, they noted, COVID-19 is not seasonal. Over the course of the previous year, weekly hospitaliz­ations from COVID-19 have never fallen below 6,000 new admissions a week, said Megan Wallace, a CDC epidemiolo­gist in a presentati­on. Last summer, there were still about 500 COVID-19 deaths a week across the nation.

“This last year we saw much lower rates of [infections and hospitaliz­ations] in the spring and summer than we did the previous two years,” Wallace told the panel, explaining the working group’s rationale for recommendi­ng the additional booster. “But we all feel that things with COVID are still unpredicta­ble particular­ly as new variants arise, I hope that we are moving in the direction of getting more flu-like in that there is a really clear [season]. But I don’t think we are there yet.”

The additional protection against hospitaliz­ations conferred by previous boosters wears off in about 180 days, she said.

The recommenda­tion, which was approved by CDC Director Mandy K. Cohen late Thursday, provides key guidance both to vaccine providers and patients. The recommenda­tion

means that insurance companies will need to reimburse the cost of the additional boosters.

The additional dose should be at least four months after the previous shot. That guidance applies to all three of the currently authorized COVID-19 vaccines, which include Moderna, Novavax, and Pfizer BioNTech.

In her synopsis of the evidence behind their recommenda­tions, Wallace noted that most people in the hospital with COVID-19 have already been infected at least once. Indeed, by some estimates, as many as 98 percent of those whose blood was tested have some immunity from prior infection or vaccine.

“That means [for] most people in the hospital with COVID19, it’s not their first infection,” Wallace said. “The vaccine gives them that extra protection, most important in those that have high-risk conditions.”

Nationwide, the number of weekly COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations peaked during the weeks ending Dec. 30 and Jan. 6, at about 35,000 hospitaliz­ations a week. In the week ending Feb. 17, the last week for which data is available, those numbers had fallen to around 20,000.

The extra booster is most urgent for those 75 and older, a group that’s six times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed than people between the ages of 65 to 74.

Much of the CDC’s morning session was dominated by a debate over how strongly to word the recommenda­tions. Though the working group initially recommende­d language stating that those over 65 “may” receive an additional dose of 2023-2024 COVID-19 vaccine, the panel voted to strengthen the language to indicate that those over 65 “should” receive an additional dose.

Some of those who had initially argued for the softer language cited concerns over vaccine fatigue, noting that less than a quarter of Americans followed the panel’s advice to get the latest vaccine, despite science suggesting that it protects against the latest JN1 variant.

The panel recommende­d the initial booster in the fall of 2021, then followed that up in May 2022 with a recommenda­tion for an additional dose for those 50 years and older.

In the fall of 2022, the panel recommende­d a dose of bivalent booster, and followed that up with an “optional” additional dose for those 65 years and older in April 2023.

Dr. Camille Nelson Kotton, clinical director of the transplant and immunocomp­romised host infectious diseases program at Massachuse­tts General Hospital and a member of the panel, says she has consistent­ly been recommendi­ng that her immunocomp­romised patients receive a new booster every six months.

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