Lodi News-Sentinel

Bivalent COVID-19 shot should become standard, FDA advisers say

- Fiona Rutherford and Tanaz Meghjani

Bivalent COVID-19 shots should become the standard form of the vaccine, U.S. advisers said, part of a plan to offer a single booster to the public each year that gives protection against the most recent, dominant strains.

Anyone getting a COVID-19 shot for the first time now receives a vaccine designed in 2020, when the virus looked a lot different than it does today. A panel of 21 advisers to the Food and Drug Administra­tion voted unanimousl­y Thursday to make bivalent vaccines, designed to fight the BA.4 and BA.5 omicron strains, the primary option. Bivalent shots made by Pfizer Inc. and Moderna Inc. have been shown to fight circulatin­g strains effectivel­y. The FDA doesn’t have to follow the recommenda­tions of the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee, but it usually does.

This vote paves the way for a plan under which health officials would meet each year to review strains of the virus for inclusion in the shots, just as they do with flu, for use in September. There are more than a dozen different COVID19 vaccine regimens and immunizati­on schedules in use in the U.S., which leads to complexiti­es in implementa­tion and communicat­ion, said David Kaslow, director of the FDA’s office for vaccines research and review.

“We’re now in a reasonable place to reflect on the developmen­t of the COVID vaccines to date to see if we can simplify the approach to vaccinatio­n in order to facilitate the process of optimally vaccinatin­g and protecting the entire population moving forward,” Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said at the panel meeting.

Healthy adults would receive one COVID-19 shot each fall in the FDA plan, while children, the elderly and those with compromise­d immunity would receive two doses. Adhoc boosters could be used if a particular­ly vaccine-evasive strain of COVID-19 arises.

Using the same COVID-19 vaccine strain compositio­n for primary series and boosters would simplify immunizati­on schedules, Kaslow said. COVID-19 shot-makers are developing products that would simplify the process further by combining their COVID-19 vaccines with annual immunizati­ons against flu.

The FDA has begun a study of co-administra­tion of flu and COVID-19 vaccines that should be complete before the 2023-2024 influenza season begins, health officials said. For the time being, there’s concern about administer­ing COVID19 and flu shots together.

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