CDC endorses more traditional Novavax COVID-19 shot - Los Angeles Times
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CDC endorses more traditional Novavax COVID-19 shot

A dish with syringes containing the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine sits in a refrigerator
A dish with syringes containing the Novavax COVID-19 vaccine sits in a refrigerator ready for use.
(Georg Wendt / Associated Press)
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U.S. adults who haven’t gotten any COVID-19 shots yet should consider a new option from Novavax — a more traditional kind of vaccine, health officials
said Tuesday.

Regulators authorized the nation’s first so-called protein vaccine against COVID-19 last week, but the final hurdle was a recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“If you have been waiting for a COVID-19 vaccine built on a different technology than those previously available, now is the time to join the millions of Americans who have been vaccinated,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the CDC’s director, said in a statement, endorsing a decision from an influential advisory panel.

Most Americans have gotten at least their primary COVID-19 vaccinations by now, but CDC officials said 26 million to 37 million adults haven’t had a single dose — the population that Novavax, for now, will be targeting.

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“We really need to focus on that population,” said CDC advisor Dr. Oliver Brooks, past president of the National Medical Assn. Hopefully, the vaccine “will change them over from being unvaccinated to vaccinated.”

While it’s unclear how many will be persuaded by a more conventional option, “I’m really positive about this vaccine,” agreed fellow advisor Dr. Pablo Sanchez of Ohio State University.

The order, which could go into effect as soon as July 29, has raised concerns among business groups and sparked questions about its necessity.

July 19, 2022

The Novavax difference

All of the vaccines used in the U.S. train the body to fight the coronavirus by recognizing its outer coating, the spike protein, and the first three options essentially turn people’s cells into a temporary vaccine factory. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines deliver genetic instructions for the body to make copies of the spike protein. The lesser-used Johnson & Johnson option uses a cold virus to deliver those instructions.

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In contrast, the Novavax vaccine injects copies of the spike protein that are grown in a lab and packaged into nanoparticles that to the immune system resemble a virus. Another difference: An ingredient called an adjuvant, that’s made from the bark of a South American tree, is added to help rev up that immune response.

Protein vaccines have been used for years to prevent other diseases including hepatitis B and shingles.

How well it works

Large studies in the U.S., Mexico and Britain found two doses of the Novavax vaccine were safe and about 90% effective at preventing symptomatic COVID-19. When the Delta variant emerged last summer, Novavax reported a booster dose increased virus-fighting antibodies that could tackle that mutant.

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Typical vaccine reactions were mild, including arm pain and fatigue, but regulators did warn about the possibility of a rare risk, heart inflammation, that also has been seen with the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, mostly in teenage boys or young men.

But early on, manufacturing problems delayed the Novavax vaccine — meaning the shots were studied long before the Omicron variant hit, so it’s not clear how well they hold up against the immune-evading mutation.

Still, Novavax points to lab testing that shows the first two shots do spur production of virus-fighting antibodies that are cross-protective against Omicron, including the BA.5 subtype that’s currently the nation’s top threat. A booster dose further enhanced production of cross-protective antibodies.

How to use Novavax shots

The CDC’s advisors unanimously endorsed the two-shot primary series. But several noted that it was important for regulators to clear a booster by the time — five or so months after their last dose — that Novavax recipients will need one.

Also, the two doses typically are given three weeks apart. But CDC officials said that, like with other COVID-19 vaccines, it’s possible to wait up to eight weeks for the second dose — except for people at the highest risk, who need protection quickly.

What happens next

Walensky signed off on recommendations for adults to get the first two Novavax doses. In its first purchase, the U.S. government bought 3.2 million doses, and vaccinations are expected to begin in the next few weeks.

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The Novavax vaccine is already being used in Europe, Canada, Australia, South Korea and other countries. Many allow booster doses, and European regulators recently cleared the shots to given to children as young as 12.

The Maryland company likewise expects U.S. authorization of a booster dose and teen vaccinations to follow fairly soon.

And like other vaccine makers, Novavax is testing shots updated to better match the newest Omicron subtypes in anticipation of another round of boosters this fall and winter.

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