Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Deciding which booster shot to get

CDC advice approves mixing and matching

- Melissa Healy Los Angeles Times TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

LOS ANGELES – Topping up your protection against severe COVID-19 while avoiding the risk of rare vaccine side effects should not be rocket science.

But just ask the experts who advised federal regulators to authorize additional shots: There’s no simple formula to guide Americans’ decisions about booster shots.

Whether you should get a booster shot and which one you should get depends on who you are, what medical vulnerabil­ities you have, and what vaccine you got first. The people you live with or the kind of work you do might also influence your choice.

And then there’s the deeply personal matter of how much risk – of COVID-19 or of vaccine side effects – you’re willing to accept.

Even if a vaccine’s protection has slipped with time, many fully vaccinated young people, or those who have had an infection before or after being vaccinated, can reasonably decide that their likelihood of becoming very sick remains low.

The experts who advised the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week made clear they were not recommendi­ng boosters for all; they were recommendi­ng that millions of people who are fully vaccinated have access to a booster shot if they want one.

A new government study on mixing and matching vaccines has added more options – and thus more complexity – to the issue of boosters.

The results so far are preliminar­y, and the participan­ts are still being tracked. But after at least 12 weeks of follow-up, researcher­s haven’t detected any ill effects in people who were first inoculated with one COVID-19 vaccine and then got a booster shot of another.

These reassuring findings led Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC director, to

Experts agree that there’s no simple formula to guide Americans’ decisions about booster shots.

leave the choice in patients’ hands.

Now, in addition to asking yourself whether you in fact need a booster, there’s the question of whether you should seek out a shot that’s different from the one you got the first time around. Here’s what you should keep in mind as you decide.

Maximizing your boost

If you’re looking to maximize your immunity boost, you’re out of luck: The data are not yet in to guide your quest.

The new study includes three groups of 150 fully immunized people – one that got the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, one that got the Moderna vaccine, and one that got the Johnson & Johnson shot. Researcher­s took each group and further divided it into three arms, with 50 people in each. Participan­ts in one arm of each group got boosted with the same product they had originally received. Each group’s second and third arms got boosted with one or the other of the remaining vaccines authorized for use in the United States.

It’s a novel and clever design. But at this point, not enough people have been tracked for a long enough time for scientists to make meaningful comparison­s

between groups.

The study’s early efforts to measure jumps in coronaviru­s-fighting antibodies showed that mixing was generally no worse than matching, and that it was sometimes better. With regard to the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in particular, the data suggested that those who got an initial J&J shot saw their antibody levels rise a bit more after 15 days if they were boosted with the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccine than if they got a second dose of J&J.

When either the Pfizer or Moderna boosters were used after any of the three primary courses of vaccine, the boost in antibodies was about the same.

Women considerin­g a J&J booster

Through Oct. 13, vaccine safety monitors detected 47 cases of a rare blood clotting disorder in people who got the single-dose J&J vaccine.

That’s a small fraction of 15.3 million doses of J&J vaccine administer­ed. But the disorder – called thrombosis with thrombocyt­openia syndrome, or TTS – is life-threatenin­g. Five people have died of the condition, which causes runaway clotting that is difficult to treat.

Three-quarters of J&J vaccine recipients who developed TTS were women ages 18-49. Four of the five who died were women.

Tests that might predict a person’s risk of developing TTS aren’t readily available. So women under 50 who want more protection might consider seeking out the Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for their booster shot.

Young men who got a shot of Moderna or Pfizer-BioNTech

For every million young men between 18 and 24 who got a second dose of one of the mRNA vaccines, safety monitors detected somewhere between 37 and 39 cases of myocarditi­s or pericardit­is – essentiall­y an inflammation of the heart muscle or its surroundin­g tissue.

The rate was highest among men under 21, but it was seen with decreasing frequency in men up to 29. (It was also seen in women, though far less frequently.) And it was slightly higher in young men who were initially inoculated with the Moderna vaccine than in those who got Pfizer-BioNTech.

The conditions were much more common after the second dose than the first. Some experts fear a third dose could further escalate the risk.

Myocarditi­s and pericardit­is are rare side effects, and in more than threequart­ers of cases, their symptoms – tightness, squeezing or pain in the chest – went away with time and over-thecounter drugs. But heart irregulari­ties need to be taken seriously, and no one really knows if a bout of inflammation will have long-term effects.

Those with a history of Guillain-Barré syndrome

Guillain-Barré syndrome, or GBS, is a reaction to infection or vaccine in which the immune system attacks the nerves, sometimes causing paralysis that can last months.

Anyone with a personal or family history of GBS who got the J&J vaccine should consider switching to one of the mRNA vaccines as a booster, and should probably avoid the J&J vaccine as a booster to an initial course of Pfizer or Moderna.

 ?? RACHEL BLUTH/KHN/TNS ??
RACHEL BLUTH/KHN/TNS

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