USA TODAY International Edition

Vaccine cleared for young teenagers

CDC panel provides new guidance for Pfizer shots

- Elizabeth Weise

Adolescent­s ages 12 to 15 should get the Pfizer- BioNTech COVID- 19 vaccine and they can get their other routine vaccinatio­ns along with it, a federal advisory committee said Wednesday.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s panel met to discuss the safety, immune response and effectiveness of the vaccine in this age group, after the Food and Drug Administra­tion signed off Monday on the shots.

The same Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices last December signed off on the Pfizer- BioNTech vaccine for adults and teens ages 16 to 17. Fourteen members of the panel on Wednesday endorsed lowering the age limit to 12, with one recusing herself.

Out of an abundance of caution, the original recommenda­tion for COVID- 19 vaccines had included a twoweek window of separation between a COVID- 19 vaccine and any other vac

cine so the cause of any side effects would be clear and so that safety data could be collected.

The recommenda­tion also was updated for all age groups by the committee on Wednesday, said CDC’s Dr. Kate Woodworth.

In a statement, the American Academy of Pediatrics recommende­d COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n for all children and adolescent­s, 12 years of age and older who do not have a medical reason not to.

The academy also supports children and adolescent­s getting the COVID- 19 vaccine together with other vaccines “given the importance of routine vaccinatio­n and the need for rapid uptake of COVID- 19 vaccines,” said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, the academy’s representa­tive on the advisory committee. She is a professor of pediatrics at Stanford University School of Medicine.

So many children have fallen behind on their vaccinatio­ns during the pandemic that allowing them to get all the shots they need at once will be helpful, said L. J. Tan, chief strategy officer with the Immunizati­on Action Coalition.

“This is necessary to ensure that we can continue to get back to pre- COVID- 19 coverage levels for routine adolescent vaccines and also for the catch up vaccinatio­ns,” he said.

Pfizer- BioNTech tested the vaccine in more than 1,000 adolescent­s, giving an equal number a placebo. Among the 2,260 participan­ts, only 16 developed COVID- 19, all of whom received the placebo.

None of the adolescent­s suffered a severe reaction to the vaccine and the biggest side effect for adolescent­s in COVID- 19 vaccine trials was headache and arm pain. The advisory committee said it was fine for parents to give their children pain relievers after the shot, Woodworth said.

COVID- 19 is now one of the top 10 causes of death among adolescent­s ages 12 to 17, said Dr. Sara Oliver, co- lead for the ACIP COVID- 19 Vaccines Work Group. The disease accounted for 1.3% of all deaths among adolescent­s between Jan. 1, 2020, and April 30, or 127 deaths overall.

“While this sounds low, it’s worth noting that this would still be in the top 10 causes of deaths among children,” Oliver said.

Adolescent­s ages 12 to 17 years also are at risk of severe illness from COVID- 19. There have been more than 1.5 million reported cases and more than 13,000 hospitaliz­ations to date in that age group, Oliver said.

They’re also more likely to transmit COVID- 19 to people in their households and communitie­s than younger children, she added.

Other vaccine makers are also testing their shots in teenagers but have not yet completed their studies or requested authorizat­ion to deliver their shots to minors.

Pfizer- BioNTech and the others are also testing their vaccines in three groups of younger children, stepping down in age: 5- to 11- year- olds, 2- to 4year- olds and 6- month- olds to 2- yearolds.

The first of those studies in older children is expected to be completed in late summer or early fall, but vaccines are unlikely to be available to these age groups before the start of the school year.

It may take until the end of the calendar year or early next year before there is enough data on the youngest children, Pfizer- BioNTech has said, because they may require lower doses of the vaccine, which need to be tested.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM/ AP ?? Olivia Edwards, 13, of Flourtown, Pa., gets a Pfizer shot in Montgomery County, Pa.
MATT SLOCUM/ AP Olivia Edwards, 13, of Flourtown, Pa., gets a Pfizer shot in Montgomery County, Pa.

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