EU backs second COVID booster for over-60s, before variant-adapted
vaccines are ready
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[July 11, 2022]
By Natalie Grover and Francesco Guarascio
BRUSSELS/LONDON (Reuters) -European Union
health agencies on Monday recommended a second COVID-19 booster for
everyone over 60, as well as medically vulnerable people, amid a new
rise in infections and hospitalisations across Europe.
While existing coronavirus vaccines continue to provide good protection
against hospitalisation and death, vaccine effectiveness has taken a hit
as the virus has evolved.
EU health agencies have since April recommended a second booster only
for those older than 80 and the most vulnerable.
The new recommendation is expected to facilitate national decisions to
speed up vaccination campaigns, which have been slowing to nearly a halt
in recent months.
"We are currently seeing increasing COVID-19 case notification rates and
an increasing trend in hospital and ICU admissions and occupancy in
several countries mainly driven by the BA 5 sublineage of (the) Omicron
(coronavirus variant)," said Andrea Ammon, the director of the European
Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), in a statement.
"This signals the start of a new, widespread COVID-19 wave across the
European Union," she said, adding that giving the over 60s and medically
vulnerable a second booster now would avert a significant number of
hospitalisations and deaths.
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A medical worker administers a dose of the "Cominarty" Pfizer-BioNTech
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine to a patient at a vaccination
center in Ancenis-Saint-Gereon, France, November 17, 2021. REUTERS/Stephane
Mahe/File Photo
Vaccine makers, such as Moderna Inc
and partners Pfizer Inc and BioNTech, have been testing versions of
their COVID vaccines modified to combat the BA.1 Omicron variant.
Although they have said those vaccines generated a
good immune response against BA.1 and the more recently circulating
variants, they did see a lower response against BA.4 and BA.5.
The European Medicines Agency (EMA), which is
currently reviewing two variant-adapted vaccines, expects to have
the first next-generation vaccines approved by September.
"In the meantime, it is important to consider using currently
authorised vaccines as second boosters in people who are most
vulnerable," said EMA executive director Emir Cooke.
There is no clear evidence to support giving a second booster dose
to people below 60 years of age who are not at higher risk of severe
disease, the ECDC added on Monday.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio in Brussels and Natalie Grover in
London Editing by Angus MacSwan and Mark Potter)
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