Los Angeles Times

For seniors, a booster effect

Those who received Omicron-targeting shots were less likely to be hospitaliz­ed, Israeli researcher­s say.

- By Melissa Healy

In the first real-world test of vaccine boosters specially designed to protect against the Omicron variant, Israeli researcher­s have found that people 65 and older who got an updated jab were 81% less likely to be hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 than those who did not.

The preliminar­y findings, posted to a website establishe­d by the British medical journal Lancet, have not yet been through the peer-review process. They are based on the medical records of more than 85,000 people 65 and older who got a dose of Pfizer and BioNTech’s retooled mRNA booster and more than 537,000 others in the same age group who did not get the shot.

Over a 70-day period between late September and mid-December, 297 people in the larger, unboosted group were hospitaliz­ed and 73 died. During the same period, six people in the boosted group were hospitaliz­ed and one died. Israeli researcher­s determined that the boosters reduced a recipient’s risk of hospitaliz­ation to about one-fifth that of an unboosted person.

Those results suggest that — in the initial weeks after vaccinatio­n at least — the Omicron-specific vaccines are even more effective than had been documented to date. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had assessed their efficacy in preventing hospitaliz­ation at between 31% and 73%.

The Israeli findings also suggest that the new boosters may help in fending off COVID-19 deaths as well as hospitaliz­ations. As a statistica­l matter, however, the small number of deaths in the study population makes it difficult to draw such a conclusion with high confidence.

The study’s authors, who hail from Israel’s Clalit Health Services and several Israeli universiti­es, wrote that their findings “highlight the importance of bivalent-booster vaccinatio­n in this high-risk population, and the necessity to increase efforts to encourage eligible people to be vaccinated.”

The Omicron-specific vaccines are called “bivalent” boosters because they use two prompts to train the immune system to recognize the SARS-CoV-2 coronaviru­s. In addition to going after the original strain that was detected in December 2019, they also target the Omicron variant, which began circulatin­g in November 2021.

The new formula was devised in response to concerns that waning immunity, and a changing virus, had compromise­d the protection of people who had been fully vaccinated and once boosted against COVID-19.

Even before it was rolled out, however, the Omicron variant began spinning myriad subvariant­s, raising new concerns about how effectivel­y bivalent boosters would continue to protect.

Since COVID-19 vaccines first became available, Israel has been closely studied because it quickly immunized most of its population with Pfizer’s mRNA vaccine. In Israel, the bivalent booster shots have been prioritize­d for people who are at high risk for developing severe cases of the virus if infected, and for those 65 and older.

The United States, however, has taken a different approach.

The CDC recommends that all Americans who are at least 6 months old get an Omicron-specific shot from either Pfizer or Moderna if they are eligible.

Though the shots are available for free to virtually all in the United States, many Americans have greeted the new offerings with indifferen­ce.

Only 15.4% of Americans 5 and older have gotten a bivalent booster dose, according to the latest data from the CDC.

“People are complacent,” said Dr. Oliver Brooks, chief medical officer of Watts Healthcare in Los Angeles. It’s one thing to counter vaccine hesitancy, he said, and it remains important to ensure easy access for all. But when people become confident they’ll be fine without boosters, public health officials have an uphill battle, he added.

“What we do know is, you’re better off vaccinated and boosted. Period,” Brooks said.

Interest in bivalent boosters has been greater among older adults, whose vulnerabil­ity to severe COVID-19 is higher. Some 31.8% of Americans 65 and older have gotten the updated shots, but rates vary widely by state. In California, nearly 43% of seniors have rolled up their sleeves, and in Vermont, about 70% of seniors have done so.

But in Mississipp­i, only 19% of senior citizens have received it.

Louisiana and Alabama are close to the bottom too, with roughly 21% of seniors getting it.

Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, said the Israeli study makes a good case that for those 65 and older, the bivalent booster helps. But he said it does little to make the case that younger people will benefit from the shots.

The fact that the average age of the Israelis studied was just over 75 raises the possibilit­y that the boosters provide the greatest protection to the “elderly elderly,” he said.

 ?? INITIAL RESULTS Pfizer ?? from a real-world test of vaccine boosters targeting the Omicron variant that were given to people 65 and older suggest they are more effective than had been documented, the research found.
INITIAL RESULTS Pfizer from a real-world test of vaccine boosters targeting the Omicron variant that were given to people 65 and older suggest they are more effective than had been documented, the research found.

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