San Francisco Chronicle

FDA OKs J&J and Moderna boosters

Mix-and-match strategy also gets agency approval

- By Matthew Perrone and Lauran Neergaard

WASHINGTON — U.S. regulators on Wednesday signed off on extending COVID-19 boosters to Americans who got the Moderna or Johnson & Johnson vaccine and said anyone eligible for an extra dose can get a brand different from the one they received initially.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion’s decisions mark a big step toward expanding the U.S. booster campaign, which began with extra doses of the Pfizer vaccine last month. But before more people roll up their sleeves, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will consult an expert panel Thursday before finalizing official recommenda­tions for who should get boosters and when.

The latest moves would expand by tens of millions the number of Americans eligible for boosters and formally allow “mixing and matching” of shots — making it simpler to get another dose, especially for people who had a side effect from one brand but still want the proven protection of vaccinatio­n.

Specifical­ly, the FDA authorized a third Moderna shot for seniors and others at high

“The available data suggest waning immunity in some population­s who are fully vaccinated.” Dr. Janet Woodcock, acting FDA commission­er

risk from COVID-19 because of their health problems, jobs or living conditions — six months after their last shot. One big change: Moderna’s booster will be half the dose that’s used for the first two shots, based on company data showing that was plenty to rev up immunity again.

For J&J’s single-shot vaccine, the FDA said all U.S. recipients, no matter their age, could get a second dose at least two months following their initial vaccinatio­n.

The FDA rulings differ because the vaccines are made differentl­y, with different dosing schedules — and the

J&J vaccine has consistent­ly shown a lower level of effectiven­ess than either of the two-shot Moderna and Pfizer vaccines.

As for mixing and matching, the FDA said it’s OK to use any brand for the booster regardless of which vaccinatio­n people got first. The interchang­eability of the shots is expected to speed the booster campaign, particular­ly in nursing homes and other institutio­nal settings where residents have received different shots over time.

The decision was based on preliminar­y results from a government study of different booster combinatio­ns that showed an extra dose of any

type revs up levels of virusfight­ing antibodies. That study also showed recipients of the single-dose J&J vaccinatio­n had a far bigger response if they got a full-strength Moderna booster or a Pfizer booster rather than a second J&J shot. That study didn’t test the half-dose Moderna booster.

Health authoritie­s stress that the priority still is getting first shots to about 65 million eligible Americans who remain unvaccinat­ed. But the booster campaign is meant to shore up protection against the virus amid signs that vaccine effectiven­ess is waning against mild infections, even though all three brands continue to protect against hospitaliz­ation and death.

“The available data suggest waning immunity in some population­s who are fully vaccinated,” FDA acting commission­er Dr. Janet Woodcock said in a statement Wednesday. “The availabili­ty of these authorized boosters is important for continued protection against COVID-19 disease.”

The Moderna booster decision essentiall­y matches FDA’s ruling that high-risk groups are eligible for the Pfizer vaccine, which is made with the same technology.

FDA recommende­d that everyone who’d gotten the single-shot J&J vaccine get a booster, since it has consistent­ly shown lower protection than its two-shot rivals. And several independen­t FDA advisers who backed the booster decision suggested J&J’s vaccine should have originally been designed to require two doses.

Experts continue to debate the rationale of the booster campaign. Some warn that the U.S. government hasn’t clearly articulate­d the goals of boosters given that the shots continue to head off the worst effects of COVID-19, and wonder if the aim is to tamp down on virus spread by curbing, at least temporaril­y, milder infections.

Those questions are likely to come up Thursday as an influentia­l panel convened by the CDC offers more specifics on who should get boosters and when. Their recommenda­tions are subject to approval by the CDC director.

The vast majority of the nearly 190 million Americans who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 have received the Pfizer or Moderna options, while about 15 million have received the J&J vaccine.

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