The Macomb Daily

Pfizer asks FDA to clear updated shot for children under 5

- By Lauran Neergaard

Pfizer is asking U.S. regulators to authorize its updated COVID-19 vaccine for children under age 5 — not as a booster but part of their initial shots.

Children ages 6 months through 4 years already are supposed to get three extra-small doses of the original Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine — each a tenth of the amount adults receive — as their primary series.

If the Food and Drug Administra­tion agrees, a dose of Pfizer’s bivalent omicron-targeting vaccine would be substitute­d for their third shot.

Pfizer and its partner BioNTech said Monday that may help prevent severe illness and hospitaliz­ation from COVID-19 in little kids, at a time when children’s hospitals already are packed with youngsters hit by other respirator­y illnesses.

Few of the nation’s youngest children have gotten their COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns since the shots were OK’d in June: Just 2% of tots under 2 and about 4% of 2- to 4-year-olds have gotten their primary doses so far, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The FDA has authorized the new bivalent COVID-19 shots — versions made by Pfizer and rival Moderna — as a booster for everyone ages 5 and older.

Those combinatio­n shots contain half the original vaccine and half tweaked to match the BA.4 and BA.5 omicron strains that until recently were dominant. Now BA.5 descendant­s are responsibl­e for most COVID-19 cases.

The CDC last month released the first real-world data showing that an updated booster, using either company’s version, does offer added protection to adults.

The analysis found the greatest benefit was in people who’d never had a prior booster, just two doses of the original COVID-19 vaccine -- but that even those who’d had a summertime dose were more protected than if they’d skipped the newest shot.

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