World

Covid-19 shot 100% effective in kids aged 12-15 after 4 months: Pfizer

New data is based on a study that involves 2,228 trial participants

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 24 Nov 2021 10:00AM

Covid-19 shot 100% effective in kids aged 12-15 after 4 months: Pfizer
No serious safety concerns were observed in individuals with at least six months of follow-up after the second dose of Pfizer vaccine. – AFP pic, November 24, 2021

WASHINGTON – Pfizer and BioNTech said on Monday their Covid-19 vaccine remained 100% effective in children 12 to 15 years old, four months after the second dose.

The companies said that the new data, which involved 2,228 trial participants, will help support their applications for full approval in the United States and worldwide.

No serious safety concerns were observed in individuals with at least six months of follow-up after the second dose.

“As the global health community works to increase the number of vaccinated people around the world, these additional data provide further confidence in our vaccine’s safety and effectiveness profile in adolescents,” said Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla in a statement.

“This is especially important as we see rates of Covid-19 climbing in this age group in some regions, while vaccine uptake has slowed. We look forward to sharing these data with the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) and other regulators.”

The vaccine was granted “emergency use authorisation” for adolescents by the US in May and the companies plan to soon seek full approval. The vaccine is currently only fully approved in people aged 16 and older.

Among the 2,228 participants, there were 30 confirmed symptomatic Covid-19 cases without evidence of prior infection, all in the placebo group.

This corresponds to a vaccine efficacy of 100%. Efficacy was consistently high across gender, race, obesity levels and comorbidity status.

The main safety concern among this age group is vaccine-linked myocarditis (heart inflammation) in males.

But such cases are very rare, and the benefits of vaccination continue to strongly outweigh the risks, data has shown. 

Covid-19 itself can cause myocarditis, both more often and a more severe form. – AFP, November 24, 2021

Related News

Opinion / 1y

The Trump dilemma and reclaiming balance: The urgent need for fair global trade

Malaysia / 2y

Current health ailments not related to AstraZeneca vaccine, says Noor Hisham

Malaysia / 2y

Govt aware of AstraZeneca vaccine side effects when it was deployed, says Noor Hisham

Malaysia / 2y

Sanctions on 4 Malaysia-based companies still in place, says US official

World / 2y

AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine to be withdrawn globally

World / 2y

AstraZeneca admits Covishield can cause blood clots, low platelet count

Spotlight

Malaysia

Aminuddin denies abandoning Sikamat

Malaysia

BN-PN cooperation talks revive questions over political loyalty as PAS shifts closer to Umno

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Malaysian teen held in Hong Kong with RM260k cannabis haul believed to be drug mule

World

Starmer bids farewell as UK PM ahead of Labour leadership handover

Malaysia

BNPL users hit eight million as outstanding balances reach RM5.3b

Malaysia

KWAP fell victim to eFishery scam, invested nearly RM200 million - PM Anwar

Malaysia

Penang signs landmark Perak water deal to secure 40-year supply from 2032

Malaysia

PRN Negeri Sembilan: Hopes of KJ becoming MB dashed as name not on candidate list

World

US strikes Iranian missile sites as Tehran warns of wider energy disruption

Malaysia

Bersatu to contest Negeri polls under own logo as Muhyiddin blasts PAS-BN tie-up

Malaysia

“There are traitors among us waiting to topple Aminuddin” - Loke

You may be interested

World

Trump escalates air strikes on Iran as ceasefire collapses

World

Andy Burnham to be made UK Labour leader on way to becoming prime minister

World

Japan PM’s approval rating drops below 50% as Takaichi faces policy backlash

World

US strikes Iranian missile sites as Tehran warns of wider energy disruption

World

SpaceX starship launch aborted seconds before liftoff after engine failure

World

Starmer bids farewell as UK PM ahead of Labour leadership handover

World

US-Iran war escalates as Washington expands strikes, Tehran threatens regional infrastructure

World

Europe heatwave linked to around 12,000 deaths as climate risks intensify