Pfizer COVID Vaccine Days Away From Approval
An advisory panel to the FDA voted 17-4, with 1 abstention, to tell the FDA to approve the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. US Health and Human Services secretary Alex Azar says that approval may come in days.
It might happen in a couple of days. That’s how far away we are to getting a COVID-19 vaccine approved for use in the United States. A panel of experts yesterday voted to tell the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that that agency should grant emergency use authorization, an EUA, for the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech. The panel examined phase 3 data on BNT162b2, a two-dose messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccine.
US Health and Human Services secretary Alex Azar told ABC news that the FDA intends to tell Pfizer that the FDA will follow the panel's advice and proceed with authorization. Azar said that the FDA needs more information so that it can tell doctors how to prescribe the vaccine properly. And, in Azar’s words, that should happen in a couple of days.
The panel's approval will not come without controversy. As Infection Control Today®’s sister publication, Contagion
Perhaps the panel will release more details about the reasoning behind its decision today, because some portion of the public will need to be
The most intense discussions revolved around just what effect the vaccine might have on 16- and 17-year olds, with some panel members voicing concern that there just wasn’t enough data to support giving the vaccine to that age group, and arguing that they should not be given the vaccine.
As Hayley Gans, a professor of pediatrics at Stanford University, put it to
Paul Offit, a pediatrician at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, also voted to approve. “We have clear evidence of a benefit. All we have on the other side is theoretical risk.”
Offit did voice some reservations about another group: pregnant women. He told
The vaccine debate comes as COVID-19’s path of destruction through society and the healthcare system grows. Yesterday, there were 203,304 new cases of COVID reported, according to Johns Hopkins University. That’s the second highest case count since the pandemic began. There have been 15.7 million confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the United States since the pandemic began. And the 2923 deaths recorded yesterday, brings to total death count to about 293,000.
Many see the vaccines—Moderna also has an
Anthony Fauci, MD, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told CNN that the country could get back to normal next summer or fall if—and this is a crucial “if”—everybody gets the vaccine. “It depends how quickly and how many people want to get vaccinated,” Fauci said.
Kevin Kavanagh, MD, points out in an
As the discussion yesterday by the FDA advisory panel underscored, there’s also some concern that the side effects of a vaccine might keep people from coming back for the second dose, something that sometimes occurs with the two-dose shingles vaccine. A nurse who participated in a Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine trial wrote about some
“The adverse effects of the vaccine—even if, at worst, they all happen at once—are transient and a normal sign of reactogenicity signaling an effective immune response,” Choi writes.
To which some patients might respond: “Do tell more.”
Choi writes in her JAMA Network article: “My arm quickly became painful at the injection site, much more than the first time. By the end of the day, I felt light-headed, chilled, nauseous, and had a splitting headache. I went to bed early and fell asleep immediately. Around midnight, I woke up feeling worse—feverish and chilled, nauseated, dizzy, and hardly able to lift my arm from muscle pain at the injection site.”
But, as Choi says, these are temporary effects and not everybody will have such a severe reaction. Getting immunity from COVID-19 will be well worth any temporary discomfort that a vaccine might cause. Choi adds, however, that many might not see it that way. She writes that “I worry that they could be a major barrier to vaccine uptake. Clinicians will need to be prepared to discuss with patients why they should trust the vaccine and that its adverse effects could look a lot like COVID-19. They will need to explain that fatigue, headache, chills, muscle pain, and fever are normal, reactogenic immune responses and a sign that the vaccine is working, despite the unfortunate similarities with the disease’s symptoms.”
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