Exclusive-U.S. could authorize Pfizer COVID-19 shot for kids age 5-11 in
October -sources
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[September 11, 2021]
By Marisa Taylor and Dan Levine
(Reuters) -Top U.S. health officials
believe that Pfizer Inc's COVID-19 vaccine could be authorized for
children aged 5-11 years old by the end of October, two sources familiar
with the situation said on Friday.
The timeline is based on the expectation that Pfizer, which developed
the shot with Germany's BioNTech, will have enough data from clinical
trials to seek emergency use authorization (EUA) for that age group from
the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) towards the end of this
month, the sources said.
They anticipate the FDA could make a decision on whether the shot is
safe and effective in younger children within three weeks of the EUA
submission.
The decision on whether to authorize a vaccine for younger children is
eagerly anticipated by millions of Americans, particularly parents whose
children started school in recent weeks amid a wave of infections driven
by the Delta variant.
Top U.S. infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci outlined the
timetable during an online town hall meeting attended by thousands of
staff at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) on Friday, according to
one of the sources. A second source familiar with the situation said
that the FDA anticipated a similar timeline for Pfizer.
If Pfizer submits its EUA by the end of September, and the data support
its use, "by the time we get to October, the first couple of weeks of
October... the Pfizer product will likely be ready," Fauci said,
according to the source.
Fauci said that Moderna Inc will likely take about three weeks longer
than Pfizer to collect and analyze its data on children age 5-11,
according to the source. He estimated that a decision on the Moderna
shot could come around November, according to the source. The second
source said Fauci's timeline for Moderna appeared "optimistic."
Officials at Pfizer, Moderna and NIH did not immediately comment.
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A nurse fills a syringe with Pfizer vaccine as mobile vaccination
teams begin visiting every Los Angeles Unified middle and high
school campus to deliver first and second doses of the coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) vaccines in Los Angeles, California, U.S., August
30, 2021. REUTERS/Mike Blake
Pfizer has previously said that it would have data on
children age 5-11 ready in September and planned to submit for an
EUA shortly after. Previously, federal health regulators, including
Fauci, have suggested that an FDA decision might come in November or
later. Moderna on Thursday told investors it expected data from its
children's study by the end of the year.
Earlier on Friday, the FDA said it would work to approve the
COVID-19 vaccines for children quickly once the companies
submitted their data. It said it would consider applications based
on a faster path to authorize the shot for emergency use.
Such emergency authorization requires companies to submit two months
of safety data on trial participants, versus six months required for
full licensure.
Pfizer partner BioNTech told Der Spiegel that it also expects to
request authorization globally for the COVID-19 vaccine in children
as young as five over the next few weeks and that preparations for a
launch were on track.
(Reporting by Marisa Taylor in Washington and Dan Levine in San
Francisco; Additional reporting by Michael Erman in New Jersey;
Editing by Michele Gershberg, Caroline Humer, Aurora Ellis and Rosalba O'Brien)
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