Enterprise-Record (Chico)

FDA advisers back Novavax COVID shots as 4th US option

- By Lauran Neergaard

American adults who haven’t yet gotten vaccinated against COVID-19 may soon get another choice, as advisers to the Food and Drug Administra­tion on Tuesday backed a more traditiona­l type of shot.

Next, the FDA must decide whether to authorize the protein vaccine made by latecomer Novavax as the nation’s fourth coronaviru­s shot for adults. It’s made with more convention­al technology than today’s dominant Pfizer and Moderna shots and the lesser-used Johnson & Johnson option.

Novavax shots are already available in Australia, Canada, parts of Europe and multiple other countries, either for initial vaccinatio­ns or as mixand-match boosters. But U.S. clearance is a key hurdle for the Maryland-based company.

FDA’s vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks said another choice in the U.S. may entice at least some vaccine holdouts — whatever their reason — to consider rolling up their sleeves.

“We do have a problem with vaccine uptake that is very serious in the United States,” Marks said. “Anything we can do to get people more comfortabl­e to accept these potentiall­y life-saving products is something that we feel we are compelled to do.”

A final FDA decision isn’t expected immediatel­y, as the agency finishes combing through the data.

Nor is it clear how widely a Novavax vaccine would be used, at least right away. Only about 27 million U.S. adults remain unvaccinat­ed, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Eventually, Novavax hopes also to become a choice for the millions more who haven’t yet had a booster dose of today’s vaccines, regardless of which shot people got originally.

The FDA advisory panel voted that the benefits of two primary Novavax doses outweigh its risks — but they had a lot of questions about the shots’ role at this point in the pandemic.

“This vaccine does indeed fill some unmet needs,” such as an option for people with allergies to competing shots, said Dr. Michael Nelson of the University of Virginia.

But the FDA is considerin­g two adult doses for now, when other COVID-19 vaccines have needed a third dose, he said.

And while “this vaccine has incredible potential,” there’s no clear evidence yet of how well it works against the more contagious omicron variant and its siblings, added

fellow adviser Dr. Bruce Gellin of the Rockefelle­r Foundation.

Large studies in the U.S., Mexico and Britain found two doses of the Novavax vaccine were safe and about 90% effective at preventing symptomati­c COVID-19. One complicati­on: Those studies were done far earlier in the pandemic.

Novavax chief medical officer Dr. Filip Dubovsky said tests of a booster dose revved up virus-fighting antibodies that could tackle the omicron mutant, data that FDA will have to consider later. This type of vaccine “we think generates a broad immune response against a broad array of variants,” he told the FDA advisory panel.

Trial participan­ts generally experience­d only mild reactions such as injection-site pain or fatigue, but the FDA did highlight a possible concern: six cases of heart inflammati­on, known as myocarditi­s, found among the 40,000 people who received the vaccine in studies.

COVID-19 vaccines are coming under close scrutiny for the possibilit­y of heart inflammati­on after the Pfizer and Moderna shots were linked to that rare risk.

Novavax argued there were other potential causes for the reports. Other infections including COVID-19 also can cause heart inflammati­on. The company said more than 744,000 vaccinatio­ns in other countries so far support the shots’ safety.

Several of FDA’s advisers said the Novavax vaccine should come with a warning until more is known but cautioned against comparison­s with the Pfizer and Moderna shots’ estimated rate of the rare side effect.

“I don’t want to stigmatize this vaccine inappropri­ately,” said Dr. Cody Meissner of Tufts University.

The Novavax vaccine is made of copies of the spike protein that coats the coronaviru­s, packaged into nanopartic­les that to the immune system resemble a virus. Then an immuneboos­ting ingredient, or adjuvant, that’s made from the bark of a South American tree is added that acts as a red flag to ensure those particles look suspicious enough to spark a strong immune response.

Protein vaccines have been used for years to prevent hepatitis B, shingles and other diseases.

That’s very different than the vaccines currently used in the U.S. The most widely used Pfizer and Moderna vaccines deliver genetic instructio­ns for the body to produce its own copies of the spike protein. J&J uses a cold virus to deliver those instructio­ns.

 ?? SERUM INSTITUTE OF INDIA FOR NOVAVAX ?? Vials of freshly manufactur­ed Novavax COVID-19vaccines wait to be labeled in 2022 in Pune, India.
SERUM INSTITUTE OF INDIA FOR NOVAVAX Vials of freshly manufactur­ed Novavax COVID-19vaccines wait to be labeled in 2022 in Pune, India.

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