The Columbus Dispatch

Who will get COVID boosters and when?

Vaccines’ ability to stop milder infection dropping

- Lauran Neergaard

COVID-19 booster shots may be coming for at least some Americans but already the Biden administra­tion is being forced to scale back expectatio­ns – illustrati­ng just how much important science still has to be worked out.

The initial plan was to offer Pfizer or Moderna boosters starting Sept. 20, contingent on authorizat­ion from U.S. regulators. But now administra­tion officials acknowledg­e Moderna boosters probably won’t be ready by then – the Food and Drug Administra­tion needs more evidence to judge them. Adding to the complexity, Moderna wants its booster to be half the dose of the original shots.

As for Pfizer’s booster, who really needs another dose right away isn’t a simple decision either. What’s ultimately recommende­d for an 80-year-old vaccinated back in December may be different than for a 35-year-old immunized in the spring: Who likely would get a stronger immunity boost by waiting longer for another shot.

FDA scientific advisers will publicly debate Pfizer’s evidence on Sept. 17, just three days before the administra­tion’s target. If the FDA approves another dose, then advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will recommend who should get one.

That’s tricky because while realworld data shows the vaccines used in the U.S. remain strongly protective against severe disease and death, their ability to prevent milder infection is dropping. It’s not clear how much of that is due to immunity waning or the extra-contagious delta variant – or the fact that delta struck just as much of the country dropped masks and other precaution­s.

When to jump to boosters “becomes a judgment,” said Dr. Jesse Goodman of Georgetown University, a former FDA vaccine chief. “And is that urgent or do we have time for the data to come in?”

Already the CDC is considerin­g recommendi­ng the first boosters just for

nursing home residents and older adults who’d be at highest risk of severe disease if their immunity wanes – and to front-line health workers who can’t come to work if they get even a mild infection.

Some other countries already have begun offering boosters amid an ethical debate about whether rich countries should get a third dose before most people in poor countries get their first round.

Here’s what we know about the biology behind booster decisions:

Question: What do booster shots do?

A: Vaccines train the immune system to fight the coronaviru­s, including by producing antibodies that block the virus from getting inside cells. People harbor huge levels right after the shots. But just like with vaccines against other diseases, antibodies gradually drop until reaching a low maintenanc­e level.

A booster dose revs those levels back up again.

Pfizer and Moderna have filed FDA applicatio­ns for booster doses but the government will decide on extra Johnson & Johnson doses later.

Q: How much protection does that translate into?

A: No one yet knows “the magic line”

– the antibody level known as the correlate of protection below which people are at risk for even mild infection, said immunologi­st Ali Ellebedy of Washington University at St. Louis.

But vaccines’ main purpose is to prevent severe disease. “It’s a very high bar to really go and say we can completely block infection,” Ellebedy noted.

Plus, people’s responses to their initial vaccinatio­n vary. Younger people, for example, tend to produce more antibodies to begin with than older adults.

That initial variation is behind the FDA’S recent decision that people with severely weakened immune systems from organ transplant­s, cancer or other conditions need a third dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine to have a chance at protection. In those people, it’s not a booster but an extra amount they need up-front.

Q: Won’t antibodies just wane again after a booster?

A: Eventually. “We don’t know the duration of protection following the boosters,” cautioned Dr. William Moss of Johns Hopkins University.

But antibodies are only one defense. If an infection sneaks past, white blood cells called T cells help prevent serious illness by killing virus-infected cells. Another type called memory B cells jump into action to make lots of new antibodies.

Those back-up systems help explain why protection against severe COVID-19 is holding strong so far for most people. One hint of trouble: CDC has preliminar­y data that effectiveness against hospitaliz­ation in people 75 and older dropped slightly in July – to 80% – compared to 94% or higher for other adults.

“It’s much easier to protect against severe disease because all you need is immunologi­c memory. And I would imagine for a younger person that would last for a while,” maybe years, said Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia.

Q: What’s the best time to get a booster?

A: For many other types of vaccines, waiting six months for a booster is the recommende­d timing. The Biden administra­tion has been planning on eight months for COVID-19 boosters.

The timing matters because the immune system gradually builds layers of protection over months. Give a booster too soon, before the immune response matures, and people can miss out on the optimal benefit, said Dr. Cameron Wolfe, an infectious disease specialist at Duke University.

“Sometimes waiting a little bit extra time is in fact appropriat­e to gain the strongest response,” he said.

Not everyone’s waiting on a final decision. For example, Colorado’s Uchealth has opened boosters to certain high-risk people first vaccinated back in December and January. San Francisco is giving some people who had a single-dose J&J vaccine a second shot from Pfizer or Moderna.

Q: Will booster shots contain the original vaccine, or one tailored to delta?

A: The boosters will be an extra dose of the original vaccine. Manufactur­ers still are studying experiment­al doses tweaked to better match delta. There’s no public data yet that it’s time to make such a dramatic switch, which would take more time to roll out.

“I’m very, very confident that this vaccine will work against delta with a single booster of the same vaccine,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told The Associated Press.

 ?? PFIZER VIA AP ?? The Biden administra­tion is being forced to scale back expectatio­ns for COVID-19 booster shots.
PFIZER VIA AP The Biden administra­tion is being forced to scale back expectatio­ns for COVID-19 booster shots.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States