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FDA advisers recommend J&J
and Moderna boosters |
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Vaccine
advisers to the US Food and Drug Administration voted
unanimously last week to recommend a booster dose for both Johnson &
Johnson and Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccines. For Moderna, the
advisers recommended that the 50-micorgram booster dose -- half the size of
the initial doses -- be administered six months after the completion of the
primary series and only to certain groups: people age 65 and older; people
ages 18 to 64 who are at high risk of severe Covid-19; and people ages 18 to
64 whose exposure to the coronavirus in their settings or jobs put them at
risk for Covid-19 complications or severe illness. For Johnson
& Johnson, the recommendation was for a booster dose at least
two months after people get the first dose. This would apply to all
recipients of the J&J vaccine, which is authorized for people 18 and
older. Remember,
these are still just recommendations and the FDA has yet to authorize
boosters for either vaccine. Currently, only Pfizer has
received emergency use authorization for certain
adults to receive booster doses. The FDA
also asked the committee to discuss data showing that it's safe to
mix any of the three authorized Covid-19 vaccines -- Moderna's,
Pfizer's, or Johnson & Johnson's -- when giving booster shots.
The National Institutes of Health presented early information from an ongoing
study showing that it didn't matter which vaccine people got first
and which booster they got -- it was safe to mix boosters and it revved up
immune response. Mixing boosters also provided a good response to
the Delta variant. Dr.
Amanda Cohn, a member of the FDA committee who is also chief medical officer
for the CDC's National Center for Immunizations and Respiratory Diseases,
said it would help the CDC in guiding the use of boosters. If the
FDA gives emergency use authorization for Moderna and Johnson & Johnson
boosters, vaccine advisers to the US Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention will meet to discuss whether to recommend them. Typically, shots
can be administered once the CDC director signs off on the
recommendation. |
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