Pfizer Data Show Vaccine for Kids 90% Effective in Preventing COVID

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Pfizer says its vaccine for children is 90% effective at preventing COVID-19 infections.

The Pfizer vaccine for kids ages 5 to 11 is 10 micrograms, roughly one-third of the dose given to adolescents and adults.

In data presented to the FDA ahead of the agency’s review of its shots for children, the company described the interim results of two ongoing studies testing the safety and effectiveness of its 10-microgram shots.

The vaccine effectiveness data comes from a study of more than 2,000 kids ages 5 to 11. Two-thirds of the children were randomly assigned to receive a child-sized dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, while the other third was sorted into the placebo group.

The study got underway as the Delta variant became dominant around the world. As of the first week of October, 16 participants in the placebo group had gotten a symptomatic, lab-confirmed COVID-19 infection, compared with just three who caught COVID in the vaccinated group.

According to the company’s analysis of its own studies, side effects seen in the study were nearly all mild. The most common side effect reported was pain at the site of the shot. Kids in the group that received the vaccine also had fatigue, headaches, fever, and chills at higher rates than were seen in the placebo group. These were most common after the second dose. Some skin reactions were seen in the study, like itching and rashes, but these were mostly mild and went away within a few days.

Kids also could have swollen lymph nodes after their vaccinations, as adults sometimes do, but these reactions were temporary.

One child developed a tic, a recurring involuntary muscle twitch or vocal sound, that came one week after their second dose of the vaccine. It was judged by study investigators to be related to the vaccine. The company says it was going away by the time the study was being published.

Reassuringly, no cases of heart inflammation called myocarditis found in the study. Myocarditis is rare, occurring in about 36 people for every 100,000 who are vaccinated, according to the CDC.

Sources:

Pfizer, VRBPAC Briefing Document, Oct. 22, 2021

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