Daily Breeze (Torrance)

Vulnerable patients may get extra doses

More vaccines for those with weak immune systems

- By Apoorva Mandavilli and Sharon Lafraniere

WASHINGTON >> The Food and Drug Administra­tion is speeding efforts to authorize extra doses of the coronaviru­s vaccines for Americans with weakened immune systems, a change that reflects a growing concern within the Biden administra­tion about these vulnerable patients as the contagious delta variant surges nationwide.

The regulatory move would mean that people with impaired immune responses who need an extra shot, such as certain cancer patients, would be able to get one legally. That is a safer alternativ­e than patients seeking shots on their own, as many now do, several experts said.

“The data are unequivoca­l that they have not gotten a good response to begin with” and need additional doses, Dr. Anthony Fauci, lead medical adviser to the White House on the pandemic, said in an interview Friday.

Compared with other Americans, “there is much, much more of a compelling reason to do that sooner rather than later,” he said.

The benefit of vaccinatin­g these patients may extend well beyond this group. Persistent infection with the coronaviru­s in immunocomp­romised people may lead to more transmissi­ble or virulent variants, according to recent research. Protecting these patients may help prevent variants from emerging.

Officials at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the FDA had been exploring special programs to get additional shots to immunocomp­romised patients. Now the FDA aims to modify the emergency authorizat­ions of at least two of the vaccines, if data from the CDC support such a move, according to two people with knowledge of the issue.

The move, expected this month, was first reported by The Washington Post.

Full approval of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is expected by early September, perhaps even sooner. “If you told me that full approval is expected by February, I would say that’s a long time for immunosupp­ressed people to wait,” said Dr. Dorry Segev, a transplant surgeon at Johns Hopkins University. “But the next month will bring us a lot of data.”

Fauci earlier in the week distinguis­hed between booster shots for people who are fully vaccinated but may be seeing waning immunity, for which the scientific rationale is not yet clear, and additional shots for people with impaired immune systems. Research indicates that at least some of the latter group need extra doses.

The World Health Organizati­on on Wednesday decried the move toward booster shots for fully vaccinated people in rich countries, saying poor nations urgently need the extra doses. But officials took pains to add that this criticism did not refer to extra doses for people with weakened immune systems, who may not have been fully protected to begin with.

Since April, France has offered third doses to certain people with poor immune responses, and Germany and Hungary recently followed suit. But in many European countries, the strategy is not limited only to these patients but also includes the older adults, for example, or those who received the AstraZenec­a or Johnson & Johnson vaccines.

In the United States, at least 3% of the population is immunocomp­romised because of medical reasons such as some cancers, organ transplant­s, chronic liver disease, kidney failure and dialysis, or because of widely prescribed medication­s such as Rituxan, steroids and methotrexa­te.

With the delta variant surging, some of these patients and their physicians have been pleading with federal agencies to open a regulatory path to third doses. Although advisers to the CDC have long seemed to favor the idea, the FDA had not yet done so.

Older adults and people with some conditions that suppress the immune system are routinely given extra doses of the vaccines for influenza and hepatitis B. That experience provides a sound justificat­ion for offering additional doses to some older adults and people whose immune responses are muted, said Dr. Balazs Halmos, an oncologist at the Montefiore Medical Center in the New York City borough of the Bronx.

“Being very proactive makes sense to me,” Halmos said. “I would love to see the FDA quickly making that stand and maybe following these countries in terms of their proactive approach.”

But other experts are more circumspec­t. Scientists are still unsure which groups of immunocomp­romised people will benefit from a third dose.

“I think you can justify both positions,” said Dr. Helen Boucher, an infectious disease physician at Tufts Medical Center. “Germany is justified in what they’re doing, but I also feel like we’re justified in hanging back because the informatio­n is far from perfect.”

Boucher said she empathizes with patients who are immunosupp­ressed. But “the bottom line is, we need more informatio­n,” she added.

That informatio­n has been trickling in far too slowly for some Americans.

Deborah Rogow, 70, has multiple myeloma and is worried about the spread of the contagious delta variant. Rogow said having a doctor prescribe a third dose if necessary would have been ideal.

For the moment, she is on her own, so Rogow plans to get a third dose of the Moderna vaccine next week at a pharmacy in Santa Barbara. The Moderna vaccine is still far from full approval, she noted, but she did not want to get a Pfizer-BioNTech dose without more data on mixing the two vaccines.

“I definitely would have appreciate­d if I could have had my doctor say to do it,” she said. “But it’s coming a little too late.”

Additional doses may help some people with weak immune systems, but others may show little improvemen­t even after a third dose, and still others may not need extra doses at all. In a study of organ-transplant recipients, only onethird of the patients who got a third dose showed a benefit.

“I wish we had a more rational process to identify individual­s within these categories who actually need it versus not,” said Deepta Bhattachar­ya, an immunologi­st at the University of Arizona.

There are safety concerns with enhancing immunity in patients whose responses are suppressed for a reason. One patient in the transplant study experience­d mild rejection of her transplant­ed heart after receiving a third dose, and recovered, said Segev, who led the research. Patients who have autoimmune conditions may experience flares when their immunity is enhanced.

“You’re walking this fine line between wanting the immune system suppressed but also needing the immune system activated to get a good vaccine response,” Segev said.

There is also not much long-term data on people who have received third doses, he noted: “I don’t think there is strong evidence that a third dose is safe yet there is encouragin­g evidence.”

In the meantime, he suggests that the safest way for people with weak immune systems to get a third dose is to enroll in research studies where they can be closely monitored.

The coronaviru­s persists for much longer than usual in some immunocomp­romised people and has opportunit­ies to make big evolutiona­ry leaps, according to a study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine.

Some variants now in circulatio­n may have arisen in that way, researcher­s have said, and leaving people with impaired immune systems unprotecte­d may open the door to more dangerous variants.

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SAUL MARTINEZ — THE NEW YORK TIMES A dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is drawn into a syringe in Miami on Thursday.
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