Times-Call (Longmont)

FDA panel backs pfizer’ s low-dose COVID -19 vaccine for children

- BY LAURAN NEERGAARD AND MATTHEW PERRONE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — The U.S. moved a step closer to expanding COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for millions more children as government advisers on Tuesday endorsed kid-size doses of Pfizer’s shots for 5- to 11-year-olds.

A Food and Drug Administra­tion advisory panel voted unanimousl­y, with one abstention, that the vaccine’s benefits in preventing COVID-19 in that age group outweigh any potential risks. That includes questions about a heart-related side effect that’s been very rare in teens and young adults despite their use of a much higher vaccine dose.

While children are far less likely than older people to get severe COVID-19, ultimately many panelists decided it’s important to give parents the choice to protect their youngsters — especially those at high risk of illness or who live in places where other precaution­s, like masks in schools, aren’t being used.

“This is an age group that deserves and should have the same opportunit­y to be vaccinated as every other age,” said panel member Dr. Amanda Cohn of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The FDA isn’t bound by the panel’s recommenda­tion and is expected to make its own deci

sion within days. If the FDA concurs, there’s still another step: Next week, the CDC will have to decide whether to recommend the shots and which youngsters should get them.

Full-strength shots made by Pfizer and its partner Biontech already are recommende­d for everyone 12 and older but pediatrici­ans and many parents are clamoring for protection for younger children. The extra-contagious delta variant has caused an alarming rise in pediatric infections -and families are frustrated with school quarantine­s and having to say no to sleepovers and other rites of childhood to keep the virus at bay.

In the 5- to 11-year-old age group, there have been over 8,300 hospitaliz­ations reported, about a third requiring intensive care, and nearly 100 deaths.

States are getting ready to roll out the shots — just a third of the amount given to teens and adults — that will come in special orangecapp­ed vials to avoid dosage mix-ups. More than 25,000 pediatrici­ans and other primary care providers have signed up so far to offer vaccinatio­n, which will also be available at pharmacies and other locations.

But for all that anticipati­on, there also are people who strongly oppose vaccinatin­g younger children, and both FDA and its advisers were inundated with an email campaign seeking to block the Pfizer shot.

Dr. Jay Portnoy of Children’s Mercy Hospital in Kansas City, Missouri, said despite over 4,000 emails urging him to vote against the vaccine, he was persuaded by the data showing it works. Portnoy said he also was representi­ng “parents I see every day in the clinic who are terrified of sending their children to school. ... They need a voice also.”

Panelists stressed they weren’t supporting vaccine mandates for young children — and the FDA doesn’t make mandate decisions. FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks also said it would be highly unusual for other groups to mandate something that’s cleared only for emergency use. Several advisers said they wished they could tailor the shots for the highest-risk youngsters, a decision that would fall to the CDC.

Dr. James Hildreth of Meharry Medical College said he ultimately voted in favor of the vaccine “to make sure that the children who really need this vaccine — primarily Black and brown children in our country — get it.”

Pfizer studied 2,268 elementary schoolchil­dren given two shots three weeks apart of either a placebo or the kid dose. Vaccinated youngsters developed levels of virusfight­ing antibodies just as strong as teens and young adults who got the fullstreng­th shots. More important, the vaccine proved nearly 91% effective at preventing symptomati­c infection — based on 16 cases of COVID-19 among kids given dummy shots compared to just three who got vaccinated.

The kid dosage also proved safe, with similar or fewer temporary side effects — such as sore arms, fever or achiness — that teens experience. At FDA’S request, Pfizer more recently enrolled another 2,300 youngsters into the study, and preliminar­y safety data has shown no red flags.

But that study isn’t large enough to detect any extremely rare side effects, such as the heart inflammati­on that occasional­ly occurs after the second fullstreng­th dose, mostly in young men and teen boys. The panel spent hours discussing if younger children, given a smaller dose, might face that side effect, too.

Statistica­l models developed by FDA scientists showed that in most scenarios of the continuing pandemic, the vaccine would prevent far more COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations in this age group than would potentiall­y be caused by that rare heart problem.

FDA’S models suggested the vaccine could prevent 200 to 250 hospitaliz­ations for every 1 million youngsters vaccinated — assuming that virus spread remained high, something that’s hard to predict.

 ?? Cliff Grassmick / Staff Photograph­er ?? A Tuesday endorsemen­t of vaccinatin­g 5- to 11-year-olds against COVID-19 means millions more kids, like these St. Vrain Valley first-graders, are a step closer to being eligible for inoculatio­n with Pfizer’s shots.
Cliff Grassmick / Staff Photograph­er A Tuesday endorsemen­t of vaccinatin­g 5- to 11-year-olds against COVID-19 means millions more kids, like these St. Vrain Valley first-graders, are a step closer to being eligible for inoculatio­n with Pfizer’s shots.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States