Marysville Appeal-Democrat

J&J’S COVID vaccine could protect millions – if people take it

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine could protect millions more Americans from contractin­g the coronaviru­s. The key will be assuring people that the single-shot vaccine is worth taking, as its overall efficacy appears lower than the two-dose ones already on the market in the U.S.J&J’S shot, which U.S. regulators authorized Saturday, is more convenient than the vaccines cleared by the Food and Drug Administra­tion last year.

It requires one injection and can be stored for months in a refrigerat­or. State health officials and the Biden administra­tion see it as a way to quickly host mass clinics as more transmissi­ble virus variants continue to spread. Yet the ease of distributi­ng the vaccine will need to be balanced with the risk of creating the perception that J&J’S shot is an inferior option.

At first blush, J&J’S formula looks less effective than the vaccines from Pfizer Inc.-biontech SE and Moderna Inc. It was found to be 72% effective in preventing moderate-tosevere COVID-19 cases in the U.S., and 66% effective globally. Pfizer-biontech and Moderna respective­ly touted 95% and 94% efficacy in preventing symptoms of the disease.

Yet it’s impossible to directly compare results. J&J conducted the largest COVID-19 vaccine trial to date, including at dozens of sites in South Africa and Brazil, pitting its vaccine against mutant strains of the virus that the earlier vaccines weren’t tested against.

The 43,000-plus participan­t study began enrollment in September and reported results in late January. Cases were accrued at the pandemic’s peak globally.

“This is not the time to be quibbling over decimal places or the levels of efficacy that we’re seeing,” said Michelle Williams, an epidemiolo­gist and dean of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Her message is clear: Vaccines are a public health tool meant to keep people from getting sick, becoming hospitaliz­ed, and overwhelmi­ng the healthcare system.

That’s precisely what J&J’S vaccine does. Across all regions, including places where more transmissi­ble variants have spread, the single shot was 85% effective in preventing severe disease after 28 days. Further, it demonstrat­ed complete protection against all Covid-related hospitaliz­ations and deaths.

H. Cody Meissner, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Tufts Medical Center in Boston and an independen­t adviser to the FDA, said public health authoritie­s shouldn’t prefer one vaccine over another.

“It’s important that people do not think that one vaccine is better than others,” he said

Friday during a public meeting after which the panel unanimousl­y recommende­d that the

FDA authorize the J&J shot. “All vaccines work with what appears to be equal efficacy and equal safety as of this time.”

Simplicity in messaging will be essential, said Glen Nowak, director of the Center for Health and

Risk Communicat­ion at the University of Georgia. Health officials should stick to the main talking point: All three vaccines protect people against the strains of the virus currently circulatin­g and causing illness and death in the U.S.

“When you start to communicat­e complexity and nuance, you lose people,” Nowak said.

The Biden administra­tion already is trying to boost confidence in the J&J vaccine, acknowledg­ing concerns that some people may skip it and instead try to get the Pfizer-biontech or Moderna vaccines.

“The vaccine that’s available to you — get that vaccine,” Anthony Fauci, the U.S.’S top infectious­disease official, said during a briefing on Friday. “It is important to get as many people vaccinated as quickly and as expeditiou­sly as possible.”

A February survey found only 7% of people wanted a single-dose vaccine, compared with 58% who said they prefer a twodose series, according to a presentati­on Sunday to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices. About one in five said they would take either.

Of those who said they want a two-dose shot, 28% said they would take a single-shot option rather than wait a month to get another one. The survey was conducted before all of the data on J&J’S vaccine became available, which could affect attitudes.

Complicati­ng matters, J&J is testing a two-shot version of the vaccine, suggesting that it thinks adding a second shot could improve protection. At the advisory panel hearing on Friday, the company’s researcher­s faced questions from experts on whether people who received the one-shot version would need to get a second dose several months later, should the two-shot version perform better in trials.

The Biden administra­tion will start shipping 3.9 million J&J doses to the states this week, immediatel­y accelerati­ng the immunizati­on campaign. A total of 20 million are promised by the end of March, and 100 million by the end of June.

With J&J’S vaccine, the nation’s immunizati­on campaign will move swiftly.

“A one-dose vaccine decreases the burden on the health-care system,” while simultaneo­usly lowering the cost of administer­ing the vaccine, Gregory Poland, a virologist and director of the Mayo Clinic’s Vaccine Research Group, said

Friday during the FDA advisory meeting.

The vials, which each hold five doses, don’t need to be diluted with another substance before being administer­ed like the Pfizer-biontech vaccine.

Also, they can be stored at temperatur­es the average refrigerat­or or cooler can handle, so providers won’t need to wait as they thaw.

These attributes lend themselves to better serving communitie­s that may not have the ultracold freezers needed to store Pfizer’s formula.

Plus, a one-shot vaccine opens up possibilit­ies for more easily immunizing people who may be hard to reach or face barriers like transporta­tion.

Fauci has pointed to rural areas or those where it has been difficult to get people to return for a second dose as good places for J&J’S shot. Doctors’ offices could end up administer­ing the vaccine as it doesn’t have special freezer requiremen­ts, a CDC reviewer said Sunday during an emergency meeting of the agency’s immunizati­on advisory panel.

Utah envisions immunizing people with the J&J vaccine at mobile clinics and inoculatin­g the homeless, those without insurance and agricultur­al workers, among other groups. North Carolina anticipate­s J&J’S vaccine could be used to immunize people who can’t take two days off work for two doses.

Currently, the shot is authorized for those ages 18 and older. J&J will soon be launching a adolescent trial, in hopes of expanding its use to children.

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 ?? Tribune News Service/getty Images ?? Empty vials that contained a dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine against the COVID-19 coronaviru­s lie on a table as South Africa proceeds with its inoculatio­n campaign at the Klerksdorp Hospital on February 18.
Tribune News Service/getty Images Empty vials that contained a dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine against the COVID-19 coronaviru­s lie on a table as South Africa proceeds with its inoculatio­n campaign at the Klerksdorp Hospital on February 18.

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