CDC RECOMMENDS PFIZER BOOSTER FOR CHILDREN 5-11
Experts say extra protection needed as infections rise
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday recommended a booster dose of the Pfizer vaccine for children ages 5 to 11. Children in this age group who received their last dose at least five months earlier are eligible to receive the additional doses immediately.
“Vaccination with a primary series among this age group has lagged behind other age groups, leaving them vulnerable to serious illness,” said Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC. “With over 18 million doses administered in this age group, we know that these vaccines are safe, and we must continue to increase the number of children who are protected.”
The booster shot would be the third dose available for most children and the fourth dose for some immunocompromised children.
A booster dose will offer children an extra layer of protection at a time when infections and hospitalizations are once again rising nationally, scientific advisers to the agency concluded at a meeting Thursday.
“It is sobering that we have experienced over a million deaths in the U.S. as a consequence of COVID infection,” Dr. Grace Lee, a pediatrician at Stanford University
and chair of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which sets recommendations for the use of vaccines, told other panel members.
In November, the committee recommended booster shots for adults and in January did so for children 12 and older.
Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech reported in April that in children ages 5 to 11, a third dose generated antibodies against both the Omicron variant and the original version of the coronavirus. In the trial, the children received 10 micrograms of vaccine — onethird of the dose given to adolescents and adults — in each shot.
As with the first two doses, the booster appeared safe, the companies reported. The most commonly reported side effects were pain, redness and swelling at the injection site as well as aches, chills and fever.
Based on those results, the Food and Drug Administration authorized the boosters for children ages 5 to 11 on Tuesday.
About 70 percent of children in this age group have evidence of prior infection and may have some immunity as a result, Dr. Sara Oliver, a CDC scientist, noted at the science advisers meeting. But some evidence suggests that compared with vaccination, protection following an Omicron infection may be weaker and may not last as long.
The rise in pediatric hospitalizations during the Omicron surge suggests that immunity gained from infection is “not sufficient to provide a broad populationlevel protection,” Oliver added.
The committee members debated whether to recommend that all children ages 5 to 11 “should” receive a booster or only that they “may” do so if their parents or health care providers deem it to be necessary.
Ultimately, the experts voted for the stronger recommendation, after several committee members argued that there was enough evidence suggesting that a booster dose was broadly beneficial in all age groups. Walensky endorsed the recommendation later in the day.
The extra dose may boost immunity to the current Omicron variants in young children. Studies have shown that two doses of the vaccine offer virtually no barrier against infection with the Omicron variant in children ages 5 to 11, although protection against severe disease remains strong.
In adolescents ages 12 to 17, two doses offered little protection even against hospitalization, but a booster significantly improved effectiveness of the vaccines.
Many parents have hesitated to immunize their children, in part because they are at much lower risk of severe disease than adults. Fewer than one-third of 5- to 11-yearolds in the United States have received two doses.
But record numbers of children were hospitalized during the Omicron surge this winter. Nearly 4,000 children ages 5 to 11 have been diagnosed with a COVID-related condition called multisystem inflammatory syndrome during the pandemic. And some studies find that even children who have a mild illness may experience symptoms for months.
COVID-19 has been responsible for more deaths in children ages 5 to 11 than many other vaccine-preventable diseases, noted Dr. Matthew Daley, a senior investigator at Kaiser Permanente Colorado who heads the CDC’s COVID-19 vaccine working group.
“Most parents accept vaccination for hepatitis A, meningococcal, varicella, rubella and rotavirus, even though deaths from these diseases are relatively rare,” he said.
At the science advisers meeting, Dr. Doran Fink, a deputy director for the FDA’s vaccine division, acknowledged the “continued intense interest in the availability of COVID vaccines” for children younger than age 5.
He said that agency scientists were working to quickly review data on the Moderna vaccine’s effects in the youngest children and were awaiting an application from Pfizer and BioNTech for their vaccine’s use in this age group.