Houston Chronicle Sunday

Biden health officials expect vulnerable will need booster

- By Sharon LaFraniere

WASHINGTON — Biden administra­tion health officials increasing­ly think that vulnerable population­s will need booster shots even as research continues into how long the coronaviru­s vaccines remain effective.

Senior officials now say they expect that people who are 65 and older or who have compromise­d immune systems will most likely need a third shot from Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna, two vaccines based on the same technology that have been used to inoculate the vast majority of Americans thus far. That is a sharp shift from just a few weeks ago, when the administra­tion said it thought there was not enough evidence to back boosters yet.

On Thursday, a key official at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the agency is exploring options to give patients with compromise­d immune systems third doses even before regulators broaden the emergency use authorizat­ion for coronaviru­s vaccines, a step that could come soon for the Pfizer vaccine.

Dr. Amanda Cohn, chief medical officer of the CDC’s immunizati­ons division, told an advisory committee to the agency that officials were “actively looking into ways” to provide certain people access to booster shots “earlier than any potential change in regulatory decisions.”

“So stay tuned,” she added.

The growing consensus within the administra­tion that at least some Americans will need a booster is tied in part to research suggesting that the Pfizer vaccine is less effective against the coronaviru­s after about six months. More than half of those fully vaccinated in the United States so far have received Pfizer’s vaccine, in two doses administer­ed three weeks apart.

Pfizer’s continuing global study of its clinical-trial participan­ts shows that four to six months after the second dose, the vaccine’s effectiven­ess against symptomati­c infection drops from a high of 95 percent to 84 percent, according to the company.

Data from the Israeli government, which has fully vaccinated more than half of its population with Pfizer doses since January, also points to a downward trend in effectiven­ess over time, although administra­tion officials are viewing that data cautiously because of wide margins for error.

The most-recent figures from the Israeli Ministry of Health, released late this week, suggested that Pfizer’s vaccine was just 39 percent effective in preventing infection in that country in late June and early July, compared with 95 percent from January to April.

The vaccine remained more than 90 percent effective in preventing severe disease and nearly as effective in preventing hospitaliz­ation. Israel began offering a third Pfizer dose to citizens with severely weakened immune systems on July 12.

In the U.S., Dr. Anthony Fauci, who heads the infectious-disease division of the National Institutes of Health, said he was surprised by the apparent steep falloff in the Pfizer vaccine’s effectiven­ess that the Israeli data seems to suggest. He said he wanted to compare it with data that the CDC had been gathering from cohorts of thousands of people across the United States. “People are sort of raising their eyebrows a bit,” he said.

While other questions abound, senior administra­tion officials said it appeared increasing­ly clear that the vaccines would not grant indefinite immunity against the virus and that boosters might be necessary for at least some people perhaps nine months after their first shot. The administra­tion has already purchased more than enough vaccine to deliver third doses of both Pfizer and Moderna, and has been quietly preparing to expand the distributi­on effort, should it become necessary.

With so little data yet public, many health officials and experts have spoken cautiously about booster shots. Dr. Paul Offit, a member of the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s outside advisory committee of vaccine experts, said a rise in mild or moderate cases of COVID-19 among vaccinated people did not necessaril­y mean a booster was required.

“The goal of this vaccine is not to prevent mild or low, moderate infectious disease,” he said. “The goal is to prevent hospitaliz­ation to death. Right now, this vaccine has held up to that.”

Prematurel­y dangling the prospect of a third dose could also work as a deterrent against vaccinatio­n, other health experts warn. If Americans think that immunity from the vaccines is short-lived, they said, they may be less likely to get their initial shot.

“We don’t want people to believe that when you’re talking about boosters, that means that the vaccines are not effective,” Fauci testified at a congressio­nal hearing Tuesday. “They are highly effective.”

Among the vaccine manufactur­ers, Pfizer has been especially proactive in sharing its data with the government. But the administra­tion was taken aback by the company’s public announceme­nt this month that it planned to seek emergency authorizat­ion from the FDA for a booster shot.

The company said early data from its booster study showed the level of neutralizi­ng antibodies among clinical trial participan­ts who received a third dose six months after the second was 5 to 10 times as high as among two-dose recipients.

Pfizer is expected to soon publicize its clinicaltr­ial research about waning immunity and the benefits of a booster shoot in articles in a peer-reviewed journal. Moderna has yet to release data on any booster studies, officials said.

Johnson & Johnson’s one-shot vaccine has so far played a minor role in the nation’s vaccinatio­n campaign. Clinical-trial data on how that vaccine works with two shots is expected next month.

 ?? Bryan Anselm / New York Times ?? A member of the military, right, prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine Monday at New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark, N.J.
Bryan Anselm / New York Times A member of the military, right, prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine Monday at New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark, N.J.

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