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Pfizer Says Vaccine Is Safe & Effective For Children As Young As 5 - Stone - 09-20-2021 Pfizer Says Vaccine Is Safe & Effective For Children As Young As 5
ZH | SEP 20, 2021 Opening the door to FDA approval of vaccinations for children between the ages of 5 and 11, Pfizer and BioNTech announced Monday morning that their COVID jab has been found to be just as safe and effective for grade-school children as it is for adults. The findings come from a large-scale trial offering some of the first insight into how well the jab works for young kids. With the new school year starting, pressure to vaccinate children has been intensifying, especially now that an FDA advisory panel recommended last week that booster jabs should be limited to the immuno-compromised, as well as those age 65 and older. Pfizer's CEO celebrated the news via tweet: In the stage 2/3 trial with 2,268 participants, patients who received the vaccine received two shots of a 10 microgram dose (one-third the adult shot) produced antibody levels comparable to those seen in a trial of 16-to-25-year-olds who got the adult dose, the companies said. Side effects were similar to the trials for the 16-25 age cohort. Pfizer plans to submit the data to the FDA for emergency use authorization soon, though it's not exactly clear when. Meanwhile, the company will still be collecting "near-term" submission data needed to file for full FDA approval for the age cohort. Participants' immune responses were measured by looking at neutralizing antibody levels in their blood and comparing those levels to a control group of 16- to 25-year-olds who were given a two-dose regimen with the larger 30-microgram dose. Pfizer said the levels compared well with older people, who received the larger dose, demonstrating a "strong immune response in this cohort of children one month after the second dose." "Further, the COVID-19 vaccine was well tolerated, with side effects generally comparable to those observed in participants 16 to 25 years of age," the company said. Notably, a Pfizer spokesperson confirmed that were no instances of myocarditis - a rare type of heart inflammation that has been linked with mRNA vaccines - in any of the younger patients. Right now in the US, the Pfizer jab is fully approved for people above the age of 16, and emergency authorized for those aged 12 and over. Pfizer now believes it will have data for children as young as six months "as soon as the fourth quarter." While on doctor commented that Pfizer is once again doing "science by press release", but the data are still "favorable". Another Twitter user noted that the vaccines "will still need to be approved and if the CDC/FDA disagree w/Pfizer then we have quite the conundrum." While the data doesn't break down the number of confirmed cases among the placebo or the dosed group, it does show that antibody levels are similar in child with only a fraction of the adult dose. Read the full release below: Quote:NEW YORK AND MAINZ, Germany--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE) and BioNTech SE (Nasdaq: BNTX) today announced results from a Phase 2/3 trial showing a favorable safety profile and robust neutralizing antibody responses in children 5 to 11 years of age using a two-dose regimen of 10 µg administered 21 days apart, a smaller dose than the 30 µg dose used for people 12 and older. The antibody responses in the participants given 10 µg doses were comparable to those recorded in a previous Pfizer-BioNTech study in people 16 to 25 years of age immunized with 30 µg doses. The 10 µg dose was carefully selected as the preferred dose for safety, tolerability and immunogenicity in children 5 to 11 years of age. These are the first results from a pivotal trial of a COVID-19 vaccine in this age group. |