The Maui News - Weekender

J&J shot to resume

Vaccine benefits outweigh clot risk

- By LAURAN NEERGAARD MIKE STOBBE

U.S. health officials lifted an 11-day pause on COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns using Johnson & Johnson’s single-dose shot on Friday, after scientific advisers decided its benefits outweigh a rare risk of blood clot.

The government uncovered 15 vaccine recipients who developed a highly unusual kind of blood clot out of nearly 8 million people given the J&J shot. All were women, most under age 50. Three died, and seven remain hospitaliz­ed.

But ultimately, health officials decided that J&J’s one-and-done vaccine is critical to fight the pandemic — and that the small clot risk could be handled with warnings to help younger women decide if they should use that shot or an alternativ­e.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the J&J vaccine has important advantages for some people. And the Food and Drug Administra­tion updated online vaccine informatio­n leaflets for recipients and health workers, so that shots could resume as early as today.

“This is not a decision the agencies reached lightly,”î FDA Acting Commission­er Janet Woodcock said late Friday.

The U.S. decision — similar to how European regulators are rolling out J&J’s shot — comes after advisers to the CDC debated in a daylong meeting just how serious the risk really is. Panelists voted 104 to resume vaccinatio­ns without outright age restrictio­ns, but made clear that the shots must come with clear warnings about the clots.

“I think we have a responsibi­lity to be certain that they know this,” said Dr. Sarah Long of Drexel University College of Medicine, who voted against the proposal because she felt it did not go far enough in warning younger women.

The committee members all agreed the J&J vaccine “should be put back into circulatio­n,î” panel chairman Dr. Jose Romero, Arkansas’ health secretary, said after the vote. “The difference was how you convey the risk . . . It does not absolve us from making sure that people who receive this vaccine, if they are in the risk group, that we inform them of that.”î

European regulators earlier this week made a similar decision, deciding the clot risk was small enough to allow the rollout of J&J’s shot. But how Americans ultimately handle J&J’s vaccine will influence other countries that don’t have as much access to other vaccinatio­n options.

At issue is a weird kind of blood clot that forms in unusual places, such as veins that drain blood from the brain, and in patients with abnormally low levels of the platelets that form clots. Symptoms of the unusual clots, dubbed “thrombosis with thrombocyt­openia syndrome,”î include severe headaches a week or two after the J&J vaccinatio­n — not right away — as well as abdominal pain and nausea.

The government initially spotted six cases of the rare clots, with nine more cases coming to light in the last week or so. But even the first handful of reports raised alarm because European regulators already had uncovered similar rare clots among recipients of another COVID-19 vaccine, from AstraZenec­a. The AstraZenec­a and J&J shots, while not identical, are made with the same technology.

European scientists found clues that an abnormal platelet-harming immune response to AstraZenec­a’s vaccine might be to blame — and if so, then doctors should avoid the most common clot treatment, a blood thinner called heparin.

That added to U.S. authoritie­s’ urgency in pausing J&J vaccinatio­ns so they could tell doctors how to diagnose and treat these rare clots. Six patients were treated with heparin before anyone realized that might harm instead of help.

Dr. Jesse Goodman of Georgetown University closely watched Friday’s deliberati­ons and said people should be made aware of the clotting risk but that it shouldn’t overshadow the benefits of COVID-19 protection.

“We need to treat people as adults, tell them what the informatio­n is and give them these choices,”î said Goodman, a former vaccine specialist at the FDA.

Two-dose vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna, which are made differentl­y and haven’t been linked to clot risks, are the mainstay of the U.S. vaccinatio­n effort. But many states had been counting on the easier-to-store, one-dose option to also help protect hard-to-reach population­s including people who are homeless or disabled.

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