Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Covid Shots For Young Kids Now Months Away After FDA Reverses Review Plan
COVID-19 vaccinations for children under 5 hit another monthslong delay Friday as U.S. regulators abruptly put the brakes on their efforts to speed review of the shots that Pfizer is testing for youngsters. The Food and Drug Administration, worried about the omicron variant鈥檚 toll on kids, had taken the extraordinary step of urging Pfizer to apply for OK of the extra-low dose vaccine before it鈥檚 clear if tots will need two shots or three. The agency鈥檚 plan could have allowed vaccinations to begin within weeks. (Neergaard and Perrone, 2/11)
Plans to attempt to authorize the Pfizer/BioNTech Covid vaccine for children under 5 before full data are available appear to have run aground. The Food and Drug Administration on Friday canceled a key meeting of its vaccines advisory committee that had been slated for next Tuesday to discuss the submission, saying that the delay 鈥渨ill give the agency time to consider 鈥 additional data.鈥 Both the FDA and the companies suggested the application for authorization won鈥檛 proceed until there are data showing how well the vaccine works after a third dose. Those data should be available in early April, the companies said. (Herper, Florko and Branswell, 2/11)
Pfizer-BioNTech asked for the delay after the companies discovered that the Omicron wave had led to a far higher rate of infection than they had previously recorded among young volunteers in their clinical trial. The new data underscored that the Omicron variant was better than the earlier Delta variant at evading the vaccine鈥檚 protection, and it showed that two doses, which had already fallen short by another measure, were not effective enough. As a result, the companies and the F.D.A. agreed to wait for the results from a third dose, which are expected in early April. (LaFraniere and Weiland, 2/11)