top of page
Search
  • snitzoid

Holy sheet! A COVID vaccine that's not RNA tech...old school approved by FDA!

For those of you who've made it this far without vaccination (you win a free set of steak knifes) and the op to take a protein based vaccine instead. Unfortunately there's no test data to show if this works against Omicron (oh, that new strain...right) and apparently none of you wants to take it anyway. Oh well!


CDC Recommends Novavax’s Covid Vaccine for Adults 18 and Older

The two-dose, protein-based shot offers an alternative to gene technology from Moderna and the Pfizer-BioNTech partnership


A Maryland lab operated by Novavax, which has faced manufacturing issues that have delayed its Covid-19 vaccine from getting to market.


By Joseph Walker, WSJ

Updated July 19, 2022 6:47 pm ET


The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Tuesday recommended the use of Novavax Inc.’s Covid-19 vaccine, the final hurdle before the shot is made widely available in the U.S.


Now Novavax’s long-delayed vaccine will be available to adults 18 years and older who hadn’t been vaccinated previously, offered at no charge at pharmacies and through state and local government vaccine programs.


The move came after the Food and Drug Administration authorized use of the vaccine in adults 18 years and older last week, and after the agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, then voted 12 to 0 in support of the shot.


Most vaccine providers wait until the CDC signs off before giving shots. The agency usually follows the counsel of the ACIP, which is composed of medical and public-health experts and advises the CDC and develops recommendations for vaccine use generally in the U.S.


Novavax’s vaccine requires two doses given three weeks apart. It will provide a new option for people who have avoided vaccination with gene-based messenger RNA vaccines made by Moderna Inc. and Pfizer Inc. and partner BioNTech SE.


If you have had Covid-19 before, why can you get it again? WSJ’s Daniela Hernandez explains what the possibility of reinfections means for the future of public-health policy and the pandemic. Illustration: David Fang

“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,” said CDC Director Rochelle Walensky.


Novavax’s protein-based vaccine uses a relatively older and more tested technology that serves as the backbone of vaccines for hepatitis B and the human papillomavirus, or HPV.


The U.S. government said last week that it had bought 3.2 million doses of Novavax’s vaccine, but it isn’t known how much demand there will be for it in the U.S.


The FDA has authorized Novavax’s shot as an initial inoculation for people who haven’t been vaccinated. About one-third of U.S. adults haven’t been fully vaccinated, and about 10% have only received one dose, according to CDC data.


“We really need to focus on that population, with the hope that perhaps this protein subunit vaccine will change them over from being unvaccinated to vaccinated,” said Oliver Brooks, an ACIP member and the chief medical officer at Watts Healthcare Corporation in Los Angeles.


A CDC-sponsored survey of 541 unvaccinated adults early this year found that 16% of people said they would probably or definitely take a protein-based vaccine like Novavax’s, compared with 52% who said they would likely not take it, an agency official said in a presentation to the ACIP.


The FDA hasn’t yet authorized it as a so-called booster shot to enhance immunity to Covid-19. Nearly half of U.S. adults haven’t yet received a third or fourth booster shot, providing a far larger market that Novavax has said it hopes to win authorization for.


Novavax has struggled with manufacturing issues that have delayed its vaccine getting on the market.


Testing found the shot was 90.4% effective at preventing Covid-19 symptoms in clinical trials. However, the studies were conducted before the Omicron variant became dominant.


Novavax has said that its vaccine loses some potency against the Omicron variant after two doses, but that a third booster shot is likely to provide strong protection.


The shot also carries an increased risk of the heart-inflammation conditions myocarditis and pericarditis, with symptoms usually appearing within 10 days after vaccination, the FDA has said. An increased risk of heart inflammation has also been linked to the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines.


A CDC official told the ACIP that the benefits of vaccination generally outweigh the risks of the heart-related side effects.


National health officials in Europe, Asia and elsewhere have authorized Novavax’s shot over the past several months. As of June 30, 1.07 million Novavax vaccine doses have been administered globally, Novavax said in a presentation to the ACIP.


Write to Joseph Walker at joseph.walker@wsj.com

4 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

E-scooter and e-bike injuries are soaring

What an amazing surprize! E-scooter and e-bike injuries are soaring A medical journal charted their huge rise these last few years By Melvin Backman PublishedYesterday Though so-called “micromobility”

Snitz joins Obama in endorsing Kamala

Just kidding. I urge all Americans to vote for the Easter Bunny. Barack Obama and Michelle Obama Endorse Kamala Harris for President Former first couple waited for the Democratic Party to unite befor

Post: Blog2_Post
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

©2021 by The Spritzler Report. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page