World

US approves Pfizer, Moderna Covid-19 vaccines for youngest children

This will protect kids aged six months to five years from hospitalisation, death, says FDA chief Rober Califf

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 18 Jun 2022 2:30PM

US approves Pfizer, Moderna Covid-19 vaccines for youngest children
The United States Food and Drug Administration has authorised Moderna’s two-dose Covid-19 vaccine for children aged six months to five years, and three doses of Pfizer’s shots for those between six months and four years old. – CDC pic, June 18, 2022

WASHINGTON – The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) granted emergency authorisation yesterday for the use of Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines in the youngest children, the final age group awaiting immunisation in most countries.

The agency, whose approval is considered the global gold standard, authorised Moderna’s two-dose vaccine for children aged six months to five years, and three doses of Pfizer’s shots for those between six months and four years old.

“Today is a day of huge relief for parents and families across America,” President Joe Biden said in a statement, adding that vaccinating young children will help “our nation continue to move forward safely”.

FDA chief Rober Califf similarly hailed the decision, saying “vaccines for younger children will provide protection from the most severe outcomes of Covid-19, such as hospitalisation and death”.

Pfizer said it plans to submit requests for authorisation to other regulators around the world, including the European Medicines Agency in early July.

“Parents in the US now have the option to vaccinate their children under five years of age, and we are working to ensure that other countries worldwide will follow,” said Ugur Sahin, CEO and co-founder of Germany’s BioNTech, which developed the vaccine together with Pfizer.

The Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) must now also recommend the vaccines before they are put into use in the United States – a final green light that will be given after a meeting of an advisory committee of experts that is expected to be held shortly.

But the government has said that as soon as the FDA decision was made, 10 million doses could immediately be sent around the country, followed by millions more in subsequent weeks.

Successful trials

Both vaccines are based on messenger RNA, which delivers genetic code for the coronavirus spike protein to human cells that then grow it on their surface, training the immune system to be ready. The technology is now considered the leading Covid-19 vaccination platform.

The vaccines were tested in trials of thousands of children. They were found to cause similar levels of mild side effects as in older age groups and triggered similar levels of antibodies.

Efficacy against infection was higher for Pfizer, with the company placing it at 80% compared to Moderna’s estimates of 51% for children aged six-months to two years old and 37% for those aged two to five years.

But the Pfizer figure is based on very few cases and is thus considered preliminary. It also takes three doses to achieve its protection, with the third shot given eight weeks after the second, which is given three weeks after the first.

Moderna’s vaccine should provide strong protection against severe disease after two doses, given four weeks apart, and the company is studying adding a booster that would raise efficacy levels against mild disease.

However, Moderna’s decision to go with a higher dose is associated with higher levels of fevers in reaction to the vaccine compared to Pfizer.

“We are thrilled that the FDA has granted Emergency Use Authorisation of Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine for children and adolescents, particularly for our vulnerable, youngest children,” said Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel.

“Children need to live highly social lives to develop and flourish,” Bancel added.

“With this authorisation, caregivers for young children ages six months through five years of age finally have a way to safeguard against Covid-19 risks in classroom and daycare settings.”

The US, home to 20 million children four years and under, has recorded 480 Covid-19 deaths in that group in the pandemic – far higher than even a bad flu season, according to the FDA.

As of May, there have been 45,000 hospitalisations in that group, nearly a quarter of which required intensive care. – AFP, June 18, 2022

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