Pfizer
COVID-19 vaccine safe, effective on adolescents in trial, companies say
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[March 31, 2021]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Pfizer Inc and BioNTech
SE said on Wednesday their COVID-19 vaccine was safe and effective and
produced robust antibody responses in 12- to 15-year olds, paving the
way for them to seek U.S. emergency use authorization in weeks.
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Pfizer hopes that vaccinations of the group could begin before the
next school year, Albert Bourla, Pfizer's chairman and chief
executive, said in a statement.
Pfizer's vaccine is already authorized for use in people starting at
age 16. The new study offers the first evidence of how the vaccine
will also work in school-age adolescents.
In the trial of 2,260 adolescents aged 12 to 15, there were 18 cases
of COVID-19 in the group that got a placebo shot and none in the
group that got the vaccine, resulting in 100% efficacy in preventing
COVID-19, the companies said in a statement.
The vaccine was well tolerated, with side effects in line with those
seen among those aged 16 to 25 in the adult trial. It did not list
the side effects for the younger group, but the adult trial's side
effects generally were mild to moderate and included injection-site
pain, headaches, fever and fatigue.
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The companies also studied a
subset of teens to measure the level of
virus-neutralizing antibodies a month after the
second dose and found it was comparable to study
participants aged 16 to 25 in the pivotal trial
in adults. Bourla said the
company planned to seek emergency authorization from the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration "in the coming weeks and to other regulators
around the world, with the hope of starting to vaccinate this age
group before the start of the next school year."
Last week, the companies gave the first vaccine doses in a series of
trials testing the vaccine in younger children, that will eventually
go to those as young as 6 months of age.
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen; Editing by Peter Henderson and
Peter Cooney)
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