Boston Herald

CDC authorizes vax boosters, mix and match

Now cleared for public use

- By alExi Cohan

Moderna and Johnson & Johnson coronaviru­s boosters will soon be making their way into arms after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention authorized the shots and also cleared a mix and match booster strategy.

Moderna boosters are cleared in the same population as Pfizer boosters plus one additional group — people living in long-term care facilities. In addition to that group, people who are 65-plus, have certain medical conditions or face workplace exposure will be eligible for a Moderna booster, which is half the size of a regular dose.

Anyone age 18 and older will be eligible to get a Johnson & Johnson booster dose.

It has also been authorized that booster doses can be mixed and matched with the primary doses.

Although it is expected and recommende­d that people will get the same booster shot as their original vaccine, Johnson & Johnson recipients could stick with the J&J or get an mRNA booster two months after their first shot.

Moderna or Pfizer recipients could get another mRNA shot or a J&J booster six months after their second dose.

The mix and match strategy might be used in instances of limited supplies or individual risk factors.

A recent National Institutes of Health study showed mixing booster shots yielded similar or improved antibody responses, especially for Johnson & Johnson recipients who got an mRNA booster.

The boosters and the mix and match policy became

official Wednesday night. The Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices made the recommenda­tion, which CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky endorsed. Walensky added the new eligibilit­y group of people in long-term care settings.

About 99 million Americans now become eligible for a Moderna or J&J booster shot this month. People are still considered fully vaccinated if they have not yet gotten a booster shot.

Recommendi­ng the

boosters didn’t come without concerns and questions among members of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practice, which met virtually on Wednesday and Thursday.

ACIP member Dr. Sarah Long noted the lack of evidence that boosters are needed for young adults.

“I can’t say that I am comfortabl­e that anybody under 50, otherwise healthy individual­s, need a booster vaccine at this time with either Moderna or Pfizer,” Long said.

The shots also come with rare but serious risks.

Moderna shots carry a risk of myocarditi­s, inflammati­on of the heart, in young males. There have been 39 cases for every one million doses given.

Johnson & Johnson has risks of a rare blood clotting issue, and there have been 10 cases per one million doses. Also with J&J comes the risk of Guillain-Barre syndrome, a rare disorder that impacts the nervous system. There have been 16 cases per one million doses.

 ?? GETTy imAgES FiLE ?? FINAL SAY: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky gave the final stamp of approval of the boosters on Thursday.
GETTy imAgES FiLE FINAL SAY: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky gave the final stamp of approval of the boosters on Thursday.

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