The Day

Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine appears effective for kids under age 5

- By MATTHEW PERRONE and MIKE STOBBE

Washington — Federal health officials said Sunday that kid-sized doses of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccines appear to be safe and effective for kids under 5, a key step toward a long-awaited decision to begin vaccinatin­g the youngest American children.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion posted its analysis of the Pfizer shot ahead of a Wednesday meeting where outside experts will vote on whether the shots are ready for the nation's 18 million babies, toddlers and preschoole­rs. Kids under 5 are the only group not yet eligible for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in the U.S.

Late last week the FDA posted a similar analysis of Moderna's shots for children under 6.

If regulators clear the shots by one or both companies, vaccinatio­ns could begin as soon as next week with the drugmakers ready to rapidly ship doses ordered by the government. Parents have been pressing federal officials for months for the opportunit­y to protect their smallest children as more adults shed masks and abandon other public health precaution­s.

While only about 3% of U.S. COVID cases are in the age group 6 months to 4 years, hospitaliz­ation and death rates in that group are higher than those for older children, according to the FDA's analysis — one reason experts have said protecting this group is important.

The FDA said children who received Pfizer's shots during testing developed high levels of virus-fighting antibodies expected to protect them against coronaviru­s. That's the basic threshold needed to win FDA authorizat­ion. But additional testing turned up key difference­s, with stronger results for Pfizer.

Pfizer's vaccine, given as a three-shot series, appeared 80% effective in preventing symptomati­c COVID-19, although that calculatio­n was based on just 10 cases diagnosed among study participan­ts, and before the super-contagious omicron variant of the virus was dominant. The figure could change as Pfizer's study continues.

Moderna's two-dose series was only about 40% to 50% effective at preventing milder infections, though it was tested during the omicron wave. Moderna has begun testing a booster for tots.

On Wednesday, the FDA will ask an independen­t panel of vaccine experts to debate both companies' data before voting. The FDA is not required to follow the group's recommenda­tions, but the process is seen as a key step in publicly vetting the shots.

The FDA is expected to make its official decision shortly after Wednesday's all-day meeting. The next step: the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which recommends how to use vaccines, will convene its own expert panel to debate which tots need vaccinatio­ns.

It's not clear how much demand there will initially be for the shots. A recent survey suggests only 1 in 5 parents of young children would get their kids vaccinated right away. Vaccines have been available since November for older U.S. schoolchil­dren, yet less than a third of those ages 5 to 11 have gotten the two recommende­d doses, according to government figures.

For the youngest children, each company is offering different dose sizes and number of shots, beginning at 6 months through 4 years for Pfizer and through 5 years for Moderna.

Pfizer and its partner BioNTech plan to offer two shots three weeks apart followed by a third at least two months later — each one-tenth the dose given to adults. Pfizer is currently the only company with a COVID-19 vaccine for older U.S. children.

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