If you're high risk, do not wait for updated COVID vaccines, experts say
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[July 29, 2022]
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - People at high risk of
severe disease who have yet to get a second COVID-19 booster should not
wait for next-generation, Omicron-targeted vaccines expected in the
fall, five vaccine experts told Reuters.
In many countries, including the United States, the BA.5 Omicron
subvariant of the virus is surging, but current vaccines continue to
offer protection against hospitalization for severe disease and death.
And, as the virus evolves, it is not known what version will be widely
circulating in the fall or whether new vaccines - expected to target
BA.4/5 in the United States and BA.1 in Europe - will be a good match.
“If you need a booster, get it now,” said Dr. John Moore, a professor of
microbiology and immunology at Weill Cornell Medical College, who
co-wrote an editorial on the subject currently under review.
In the United States, regulators have asked Pfizer Inc with partner
BioNTech SE and Moderna Inc to develop vaccine boosters that target both
the BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron cousins, as well as the original virus. They
are expected to be ready by October.
Regulators in Europe, meanwhile, have signaled that they would be
willing to use whichever Omicron-based booster is available to Europe
soonest, which may well be the one aimed at the BA.1 variant that drove
last winter's record surge in infections.
U.S. regulators are hoping an updated vaccine that targets the original
strain and an Omicron variant will offer broader protection against
future variants, and believe a booster that is closest to the
circulating version is valuable.
Given the current surge and people's waning immunity, experts told
Reuters the best booster for those at risk is the one at hand.
Only about 30% of people 50 and older who are eligible for a fourth
vaccine dose have received one, and fewer than 10% of those aged 50-64,
according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. For
those under age 50 or with no major risk factors, a fourth dose has not
been approved and there is little support for it among scientific
experts.
Moore said the evidence he has seen, including at a June U.S. Food and
Drug Administration meeting and since, all suggest that the benefit of a
BA.4/5 booster compared to the original vaccine is "negligible" in terms
of preventing infection.
“The public should not regard these Omicron-based boosters as some kind
of magic bullet that's going to change the face of the pandemic and
solve all their problems. It will have a marginal impact compared to the
booster we currently have,” he said.
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A nurse fills up syringes with the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccines in Waterford, Michigan, U.S., April 8, 2022. REUTERS/Emily
Elconin
'TOO MANY PEOPLE ARE WAITING'
Dr Eric Topol, a genomics expert and director of the Scripps
Research Translational Institute in La Jolla, California, said
getting a second booster offers a survival benefit over just one
booster that has been documented in five different studies.
“Too many people are waiting when we have really good proof,” he
said.
Dr. Bob Wachter, chief of medicine at the University of California,
San Francisco, said the evidence is increasingly clear that the
longer a person has gone since their last booster, the less
protection they have against infection and severe disease.
“There’s a ton of COVID around, and it’s a very infectious agent,”
he said.
BA.5 has driven a wave of new cases globally, and now makes up
nearly 82% of all U.S. coronavirus infections.
Wachter is not convinced retooled BA.4/5 vaccines will be ready to
roll out in two months. “It seems a bit ambitious to me, and even if
they hit the timeline, it will probably go to the highest-risk
groups first," he said. "I think it’s probably three or four months
away for the average person.”
Pfizer told Reuters it has a few million shots of a BA.4/5 vaccine
manufactured.
As for the newly authorized Novavax Inc vaccine, the company has yet
to seek approval for its use as a booster.
Moore, who participated in the Novavax clinical trial, said while it
is an excellent vaccine, the company's boosters are unlikely to be
available soon. Novavax has said it is developing a BA.4/5 booster
and is aiming to have it ready by the fourth quarter.
“Whatever is in the pipeline is months away," Topol said. "This is a
more virulent, more pathogenic version of the virus and being
protected as best you can is smart.”
(Reporting by Julie Steenhuysen, additional reporting by Mike Erman
in Maplewood, N.J.; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill Berkrot)
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