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Saturday, May 24, 2025

Pfizer says tweaked COVID-19 shots boost omicron protection

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1062 days ago
20220627
FILE - A syringe is prepared with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination clinic at the Keystone First Wellness Center in Chester, Pa., Dec. 15, 2021. Pfizer says tweaking its COVID-19 vaccine to better target the omicron variant is safe and boosts protection. Saturday, June 25, 2022 announcement comes just days before regulators debate whether to offer Americans updated booster shots this fall. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

FILE - A syringe is prepared with the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination clinic at the Keystone First Wellness Center in Chester, Pa., Dec. 15, 2021. Pfizer says tweaking its COVID-19 vaccine to better target the omicron variant is safe and boosts protection. Saturday, June 25, 2022 announcement comes just days before regulators debate whether to offer Americans updated booster shots this fall. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke, File)

 

By LAU­RAN NEER­GAARD-As­so­ci­at­ed Press

 

Pfiz­er an­nounced Sat­ur­day that tweak­ing its COVID-19 vac­cine to bet­ter tar­get the omi­cron vari­ant is safe and works — just days be­fore reg­u­la­tors de­bate whether to of­fer Amer­i­cans up­dat­ed boost­er shots this fall.

The vac­cines cur­rent­ly used in the U.S. still of­fer strong pro­tec­tion against se­vere COVID-19 dis­ease and death -- es­pe­cial­ly if peo­ple have got­ten a boost­er dose. But those vac­cines tar­get the orig­i­nal coro­n­avirus strain and their ef­fec­tive­ness against any in­fec­tion dropped marked­ly when the su­per-con­ta­gious omi­cron mu­tant emerged.

Now with omi­cron’s even more trans­mis­si­ble rel­a­tives spread­ing wide­ly, the Food and Drug Ad­min­is­tra­tion is con­sid­er­ing or­der­ing a recipe change for the vac­cines made by both Pfiz­er and ri­val Mod­er­na in hopes that mod­i­fied boost­ers could bet­ter pro­tect against an­oth­er COVID-19 surge ex­pect­ed this fall and win­ter.

Pfiz­er and its part­ner BioN­Tech stud­ied two dif­fer­ent ways of up­dat­ing their shots -- tar­get­ing just omi­cron, or a com­bi­na­tion boost­er that adds omi­cron pro­tec­tion to the orig­i­nal vac­cine. They al­so test­ed whether to keep to­day’s stan­dard dosage -- 30 mi­cro­grams -- or to dou­ble the shots’ strength.

In a study of more than 1,200 mid­dle-aged and old­er adults who’d al­ready had three vac­cine dos­es, Pfiz­er said both boost­er ap­proach­es spurred a sub­stan­tial jump in omi­cron-fight­ing an­ti­bod­ies.

“Based on these da­ta, we be­lieve we have two very strong omi­cron-adapt­ed can­di­dates,” Pfiz­er CEO Al­bert Bourla said in a state­ment.

Pfiz­er’s omi­cron-on­ly boost­er sparked the strongest im­mune re­sponse against that vari­ant.

But many ex­perts say com­bi­na­tion shots may be the best ap­proach be­cause they would re­tain the proven ben­e­fits of the orig­i­nal COVID-19 vac­cine while adding new pro­tec­tion against omi­cron. And Pfiz­er said a month af­ter peo­ple re­ceived its com­bo shot, they had a 9 to 11-fold in­crease in omi­cron-fight­ing an­ti­bod­ies. That’s more than 1.5 times bet­ter than an­oth­er dose of the orig­i­nal vac­cine.

And im­por­tant­ly, pre­lim­i­nary lab stud­ies show the tweaked shots al­so pro­duce an­ti­bod­ies ca­pa­ble of fight­ing omi­cron’s ge­net­i­cal­ly dis­tinct rel­a­tives named BA.4 and BA.5, al­though those lev­els weren’t near­ly as high.

Mod­er­na re­cent­ly an­nounced sim­i­lar re­sults from tests of its com­bi­na­tion shot, what sci­en­tists call a “bi­va­lent” vac­cine.

The stud­ies weren’t de­signed to track how well up­dat­ed boost­ers pre­vent­ed COVID-19 cas­es. Nor is it clear how long any added pro­tec­tion would last.

But the FDA’s sci­en­tif­ic ad­vis­ers will pub­licly de­bate the da­ta on Tues­day, as they grap­ple with whether to rec­om­mend a change to the vac­cines’ recipes -- ahead of sim­i­lar de­ci­sions by oth­er coun­tries.

 

COVID-19PfizerOmicron


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