HomeAmericaFDA advisers recommend COVID vaccines be updated to target current dominant variant

FDA advisers recommend COVID vaccines be updated to target current dominant variant

-

By Christy Santhosh

May 28 (Reuters) - The ‌U.S. FDA's advisory panel recommended on Thursday that COVID-19 vaccines ​for 2026-2027 immunization should be updated to target the dominant XFG variant, despite some staff concerns about ⁠limited data on currently circulating strains.

Eight out of nine panel members voted in favor of the recommendation, while one abstained.

Earlier this month, the World Health Organization recommended COVID ​vaccine manufacturers target the monovalent LP.8.1 strain or other currently circulating variants such as XFG or NB.1.8.1.

For ‌the 2025-26 season, the FDA had recommended COVID shots target LP.8.1 — a subvariant of the JN.1 strain.

"We can't make a recommendation if we don't have data, and that's one of ⁠my great concerns," said Anna Durbin, professor at Johns Hopkins University, ⁠and a member of the Food and Drug Administration's Vaccine and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC).

She called for strengthening real-time surveillance infrastructure and suggested the committee consider convening more than once a year.

The VRBPAC has not been changed by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy ‌Jr., who has undercut the use of COVID and other vaccines in the U.S., ⁠but the surveillance of the disease has been scaled back ‌as part of funding cuts.

According to the Centers for ​Disease Control and Prevention's COVID dashboard, new data is currently unavailable due to low sequencing submissions. The most recent update, now a month old, showed XFG strains accounted ‌for more than half of U.S. cases over the ​four weeks ended April 11.

Besides, the ⁠CDC's advisory panel vote to drop recommendations for childhood vaccines, including the ‌COVID shot, has affected their use. A ⁠court has temporarily stayed that decision.

Four COVID shots have been approved for use in the U.S.: Moderna's mNEXSPIKE and Spikevax, Pfizer-BioNTech's, Comirnaty — all three mRNA-based vaccines — as well as Novavax-Sanofi's ​protein-based shot that takes longer ‌to manufacture.

In briefing documents published before the meeting, they all said they could make the ⁠updated shot in time for the ​2026-2027 season.

(Reporting by Christy Santhosh in Bengaluru and Michael Erman in New York; ​Editing by Devika Syamnath and Shilpi Majumdar)

tagreuters.com2026binary_LYNXMPEM4R0KP-VIEWIMAGE

Author

Stay Connected

1,800FansLike
259FollowersFollow
119FollowersFollow
1,263FollowersFollow
90,000SubscribersSubscribe

Related articles

Latest posts

Share on Social Media

spot_img