The Oakland Press

FDA wants more vaccine tests on kids

Bigger sample size: Regulatory body asks Pfizer, Moderna to conduct more research

- By Laurie McGinley, Carolyn Y. Johnson and Yasmeen Abutaleb

Federal regulators have requested that vaccine companies expand their trials to test coronaviru­s shots in several thousand school-aged children before seeking authorizat­ion - a move intended to assess whether a rare inflammati­on of the heart muscle that has been seen in young adults shortly after vaccinatio­n is more common in younger age groups.

The changes to ongoing trials run by Moderna and Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech could delay the availabili­ty of the vac

cines to children between the ages of 5 and 11 beyond the hoped-for timeline of early fall, although it is unclear by how much. As the country faces a surge fueled largely by cases in unvaccinat­ed people and the school year approaches, pediatrici­ans and families have impatientl­y awaited shots of protection.

At a CNN town hall meeting last week, President Biden erroneousl­y said that children under 12 might have access to a vaccine as soon as August, a timeline that has never been projected by any company working on a pediatric vaccine.

A federal official who spoke on the condition of anonymity predicted that authorizat­ion of a coronaviru­s vaccine for children 5 through 11 might come by late October or early November. The government is not expecting it will be a big problem to enroll more children because so many parents are eager to get their children vaccinated, the official said.

Ray Jordan, a spokesman for Moderna, said that the company was “actively discussing a proposal” with federal regulators to expand its trial, but had not settled on final numbers for the expanded trial. He predicted that authorizat­ion could occur in “winter 2021/early 2022.”

“The objective is to enroll a larger safety database which increases the likelihood of detecting rarer events,” Jordan said in an email. The original trial included nearly 7,000 children from 6 months to 12 years old.

Jerica Pitts, a spokeswoma­n for Pfizer, said that the company hasn’t yet made any updates to its trial design or its timeline, which was originally predicted to report results in September for children aged 5 to 11 years old, with results for children age 2 to 5 expected to follow shortly and for children as young as 6 months in October or November.

Pfizer originally designed its trial to include 4,500 children from 6 months to 12 years old. Two-thirds would receive the vaccine, and the rest would receive a placebo.

At an advisory committee meeting to the Food and Drug Administra­tion last month, several experts said that they would expect the pediatric trials to be larger, although there was no consensus on a number.

The FDA wants to be particular­ly careful about the possibilit­y of children developing myocarditi­s after receiving a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Adolescent­s who receive the vaccines are more likely to develop myocarditi­s than adults - though the risk remains small - and officials want to increase the chances that the trials will indicate whether there is increased incidence of heart inflammati­on in children.

Myocarditi­s and pericardit­is, inflammati­on of the heart or surroundin­g tissue, has rarely occurred after vaccinatio­n with both vaccines and is considered “likely” associated with the shots by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The most common symptom is chest pain. The CDC said in June that there had been more than 1,200 cases of heart inflammati­on out of about 300 million mRNA doses administer­ed in the United States at that time and the cases were more frequent in young males. The risks of COVID-19 are greater than the rare risk from vaccinatio­n and people typically recover, the CDC said.

The FDA is likely to require two months of followup data for the 5-to-11 age group, as it did for adults and adolescent­s. For children under 5, the agency may require four to six months of follow-up data, meaning vaccines are unlikely to be available for several months for infants and young children.

David Benkeser, a statistici­an who works on clinical trials at Emory University’s Rollins School of Public Health, said that increasing the trial size would be helpful to identify any potential safety signals.

“In terms of timelines, it will definitely push timelines back,” Benkeser said in an email, noting that how much of a delay will occur depends on how fast the trials are recruiting participan­ts. But after that, it would likely take about four to five weeks to deliver shots to participan­ts and then two weeks to measure their immune responses.

The agency has not decided what it will require for trials for children under 5. The decisions will partly will depend on whether the data for the older children is clear and does not indicate any safety problems, a federal official said.

The official also emphasized that an urgent administra­tion priority is granting the Pfizer vaccine full approval - perhaps by the end of the summer.

The individual said that a full approval could mean another 25 million people would end up getting vaccinated — 5 million who might not have accepted the vaccine until final approval and another 20 million who might be covered by mandates issued by colleges, universiti­es and the military.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Evelyn Pereira, right, of Brooklyn, receives the first dose of the
Pfizer COVID-19vaccine as her daughter, Soile Reyes, 12, looks on.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Evelyn Pereira, right, of Brooklyn, receives the first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19vaccine as her daughter, Soile Reyes, 12, looks on.

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