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When Can Kids Under 5 Get Vaccinated?

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An average 672 children per day last week were admitted to the hospital with COVID-19 last week, the highest number since the COVID-19 public health emergency began.  Surging case numbers are also causing schools to close and temporarily revert to virtual learning.  While children ages 5-17 can be vaccinated for protection against COVID-19, this currently isn’t an option for children under 5 years of age.  Even though pharmaceutical companies have been working on vaccines for younger children, some bumps in the road means the timeline for getting this cohort vaccinated hasn’t exactly been static.

Pfizer’s Swing and a Miss

Pfizer was the first COVID-19 vaccine developer to begin testing vaccine in children under five.  For its late-stage clinical trial, Pfizer administered two 3-microgram doses three weeks apart, which is less than one-third of the dose given to older children.

Pfizer initially hoped to submit data on the efficacy of its vaccine in children in the first quarter of 2022, but an announcement from the company on December 17, 2021 signaled a delay in the timeline young children can get vaccinated.  According to Pfizer, its 3-microgram dose yielded high level of protection in children ages 6- to 24-months-old but did not generate a sufficient level of protection in children ages 2 to 5.

Now, Pfizer is amending its clinical trial to add a third 3-microgram dose for children 6 months to 5 years of age.  If the updated trials are successful, Pfizer says it will submit data to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in April, which pushes the timeline for young children to get the company’s vaccine back by a few months.

What about Moderna?

News that Pfizer is extending its trial left parents of younger kids understandably upset.  Fortunately, Pfizer is not the only company developing vaccines for children.  Moderna is currently conducting trials in children ages 6-months to 5-years-old, and the company expects to have results available by the end of January, which means the FDA could provide emergency approval as soon as late February or early March 2022.  Moderna is also testing younger children with a higher-microgram dosage than Pfizer, which presumably increases the likelihood that Moderna’s vaccine will yield an adequate immune response.

Children’s Risk Still Very Low

Even though it will probably be a few more months until younger children can get their shot, parents should feel some assurance that young children’s risk of complications from COVID-19 is extremely low.  The COVID-19 death rate for children ages 0-17 in the US is 0.1%, by far the lowest for any age group (in comparison, the death rate for US adults ages 50-64 is 1.39%).

While pediatric hospitalizations related to COVID-19 are at a record-high, many of these hospitalizations are incidental, meaning children are being hospitalized with, but not for COVID.  An example of an incidental pediatric hospitalization could be for a child who falls on the playground, is admitted to the hospital for a broken bone, and only tests positive as a part of routine screening.

Additionally, young children who are infected with COVID-19 overwhelmingly exhibit mild symptoms or are asymptomatic, with hospital stays rare.  And while it is possible that young children can become COVID-19 long-haulers, studies are increasingly showing that long-COVID in kids is also rare.

News of Pfizer’s clinical trial results was certainly disappointing for parents.  But with the possibility of better clinical trial results in the future plus strong data on the low level of risk for young children, parents should have a somewhat optimistic outlook heading into the third year of the pandemic.

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