National Post

Should you boost?

VULNERABLE GROUPS TO GET MOST BENEFIT: EXPERT

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The United States plans to roll out an updated COVID-19 booster vaccine to include Omicron subvariant­s of the coronaviru­s. Regulators are reviewing the shots and could give the goahead as soon as next week. Health Canada, meanwhile, has not released a timeline for approving the bivalent submission­s from Moderna and Pfizer.

Here is what you need to know about the booster:

ARE WE GETTING NEW VACCINES?

Pfizer Inc with partner Biontech SE and Moderna Inc completed applicatio­ns this week to the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion for COVID-19 vaccine boosters retooled to target versions of the Omicron variant of the virus.

These so-called bivalent vaccines include both the currently dominant BA.4/ BA.5 Omicron subvariant­s and the original version of the virus.

The Pfizer vaccine would be for people aged 12 and older, while Moderna’s would be for those 18 and older.

The FDA will likely decide on the vaccine soon. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has scheduled a two-day meeting of its expert advisers beginning Sept. 1, a step that typically follows FDA authorizat­ion.

The United States has ordered 175 million doses from Pfizer/biontech and Moderna, which are expected to be ready to ship in September.

Earlier this week, Moderna said the Canadian government purchased 4.5 million new doses of its bivalent vaccine, for a total of 12 million doses.

The COVID-19 vaccines currently available in Canada are designed to target solely the original strain of the virus.

WHO SHOULD GET AN UPDATED BOOSTER?

Health officials say the boosters are needed because immunity wanes over time and the vaccines help prevent serious disease and death.

Several experts said they do not expect the updated vaccines to be game changing and urged public health officials not to overstate their benefits.

“What the (U.S) administra­tion is asking us to do is to accept this bivalent vaccine is significan­tly better than the current ancestral strain vaccine. It would be nice if there were data to support that,” said Dr. Paul Offit, an infectious disease expert at the University of Pennsylvan­ia and a member of the FDA’S vaccine advisory panel.

“Right now, what they’re asking you to do is trust them, and to trust them with mouse data, and I think that’s a lot to ask.”

The U.S. plans to open the Omicron boosters to people from age 12, according to a CDC document.

Currently, a fourth shot, or second booster, is restricted largely to people over 50 and those who are immunocomp­romised or at high risk.

People in these same risk groups are most likely to benefit from the new boosters, said Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease epidemiolo­gist and an editorat-large at Kaiser Health News.

“If you don’t fall into one of those categories, it’s really a toss up as to how much additional benefit you’re going to get,” she said.

Gounder recommends those who have recently gotten a booster or COVID-19 wait at least three months to give the immune system the best chance to mount a robust response.

John Moore, a professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, said the most important boost is the first one. “Anyone who has not received that boost should do so as soon as possible, and irrespecti­ve of the compositio­n of the vaccine,” he said.

WHAT DOES THE DATA SAY?

Pfizer has presented data on its BA.4/BA.5 booster from studies in labs and animals. The company says it generated a strong neutralizi­ng antibody response against those and other Omicron variants, as well as the original strain of the virus.

The company provided regulators with data from a human trial testing the immune response of a shot that combined the original vaccine with the BA.1 Omicron variant. It plans this month to start a similar trial of the BA.4/BA.5 booster in those aged 12 and older.

Moderna’s applicatio­n to the FDA includes data from animal studies of the BA.4/ BA.5 booster. A mid-to-late stage trial for the vaccine in people is underway.

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