News from the FDA/CDC

Single bivalent COVID booster is enough for now: CDC


 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has updated its COVID-19 booster shot guidelines to clarify that only a single dose of the latest bivalent booster is recommended at this time.

“If you have completed your updated booster dose, you are currently up to date. There is not a recommendation to get another updated booster dose,” the CDC website now explains.

In January, the nation’s expert COVID panel recommended that the United States move toward an annual COVID booster shot in the fall, similar to the annual flu shot, that targets the most widely circulating strains of the virus. Recent studies have shown that booster strength wanes after a few months, spurring discussions of whether people at high risk of getting a severe case of COVID may need more than one annual shot.

September was the last time a new booster dose was recommended, when, at the time, the bivalent booster was released, offering new protection against Omicron variants of the virus. Health officials’ focus is now shifting from preventing infections to reducing the likelihood of severe ones, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.

“The bottom line is that there is some waning of protection for those who got boosters more than six months ago and haven’t had an intervening infection,” said Bob Wachter, MD, head of the University of California–San Francisco’s department of medicine, according to the Chronicle. “But the level of protection versus severe infection continues to be fairly high, good enough that people who aren’t at super high risk are probably fine waiting until a new booster comes out in the fall.”

The Wall Street Journal reported recently that many people have been asking their doctors to give them another booster, which is not authorized by the Food and Drug Administration.

About 8 in 10 people in the United States got the initial set of COVID-19 vaccines, which were first approved in August 2021. But just 16.4% of people in the United States have gotten the latest booster that was released in September, CDC data show.

A version of this article originally appeared on WebMD.com.

Recommended Reading

Factors linked with increased VTE risk in COVID outpatients
MDedge Infectious Disease
Children and COVID: A look back as the fourth year begins
MDedge Infectious Disease
NOVIDs: Do some have the genes to dodge COVID?
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID-19 vaccinations lag in youngest children
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID can mimic prostate cancer symptoms
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID led to rise in pregnancy-related deaths: New research
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID-19 potentially induced adult-onset IgA vasculitis
MDedge Infectious Disease
High-dose prophylactic anticoagulation benefits patients with COVID-19 pneumonia
MDedge Infectious Disease
Nasal COVID treatment shows early promise against multiple variants
MDedge Infectious Disease
Negative expectations of COVID shots may amplify side effects
MDedge Infectious Disease