Current:Home > NewsNew COVID vaccine and booster shots for this fall to be available by end of September -WealthSphere Pro
New COVID vaccine and booster shots for this fall to be available by end of September
View
Date:2025-04-18 13:53:30
The first new COVID-19 vaccines updated for this fall season are now expected to be available by the end of September, once both the Food and Drug Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sign off on the new shots. The new shots are designed to target the XBB variants — strains of the virus descended from the original Omicron variant — which are now the most common form in circulation.
Three vaccine manufacturers, Moderna, Pfizer and Novavax, are expected to offer the revised shots for this fall, which virtually all children and adults will be eligible for.
The rollout of the shots will also mark three major shifts in the U.S. response to the virus: the end of government-bought vaccine supplies, a simplification of who is eligible to get shots and a significant change to the recipe used in the vaccines.
What's different about the new COVID-19 vaccines?
After a meeting of its outside vaccine advisers in June, the FDA said it would ask vaccine makers to switch to using only a single component in their recipes targeted at the XBB.1.5 variant, in hopes of broadening immunity.
This is a change from the "bivalent" composition used in the last round of boosters, which blended two components: one aimed at boosting immunity against the original strain of the virus and another aimed at the Omicron BA.4/5 strain.
While newer XBB descendants have since emerged — including EG.5, a strain that's rapidly gaining ground — experts say these variants so far remain closely related, and the updated vaccine formula should offer protection..
- CDC says COVID variant EG.5 is now dominant, including strain some call "Eris"
- Loss of smell or taste was once a telltale sign of COVID. Not anymore.
"There doesn't seem to be any particular advantage to a bivalent vaccine. XBB is the lineage right now, and there is good cross-protection, no matter what antigen is chosen, according to the data that we've been shown," Dr. Eric Rubin, one of the FDA's vaccine advisers, said at the June meeting.
When will new COVID-19 vaccines be available?
While the new vaccines are expected to be ready by late September, it could be October before they're widely available for everyone who wants them.
Two steps will still be needed before the new vaccines can make their debut in the U.S. commercial market: a green light from the FDA and new recommendations from the CDC.
The FDA is expected to grant approval or emergency authorization to all three new COVID-19 vaccines over the next two months. Pfizer and Moderna could be first to get the FDA's licensure, after finishing their submissions to the agency back in June.
"What we expect is that we will have approval by the end of August. And we are ready with products already now," Pfizer's CEO Albert Bourla told investors on August 1.
Novavax has yet to complete its submission for a new emergency use authorization for its updated vaccine, but plans to do so within the coming weeks.
"That's going to be concluded this month, with expectation for us to be delivering product by the end of September," Novavax's President of Research and Development Filip Dubovsky told investors on August 8.
The FDA is not expected to call another meeting of its Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee before signing off on the new shots. However, the CDC does still plan to convene its Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices before issuing updated recommendations for the three new shots.
"After their authorization or approval, ACIP will meet to make a recommendation outlining use of these updated vaccines this fall," CDC spokesperson Kathleen Conley told CBS News in a statement.
This is needed to ensure liability protections for vaccinators as well as to guarantee insurance coverage and access to the new shots.
That timeline could add up to new COVID-19 vaccines not being widely available until October, along the lines of what CDC Director Dr. Mandy Cohen recently told NPR. October would be later than previously forecasted by the FDA's top vaccines official Dr. Peter Marks, who had predicted the shots could be available in September.
"While we cannot comment directly on timing, the FDA anticipates taking timely action to authorize or approve updated COVID-19 vaccines in order to make vaccines available this fall that meet our expectations for safety, effectiveness and quality," an FDA spokesperson said in a statement.
Who will be eligible to get the new COVID-19 vaccines?
Unlike vaccinations earlier in the pandemic, federal officials say they have been working in recent months to simplify eligibility for future rounds of shots, akin to the annual seasonal influenza shot.
For teens and adults, Americans would have their pick of any of the three updated vaccines.
For children as young as 2 years old, draft CDC vaccine recommendations presented in June would allow for a single new shot from either Pfizer or Moderna in order to be up to date. Children down to 6 months still might be recommended to get two or three doses.
"The intent is to harmonize for all doses, all ages, same composition. So in the fall, that would be the 2023-2024 formula, would be an XBB.1.5," the FDA's Dr. David Kaslow said in June at the CDC meeting.
- In:
- COVID-19 Vaccine
- COVID-19
- Coronavirus
CBS News reporter covering public health and the pandemic.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- How to turn off iPhone's new NameDrop feature, the iOS 17 function authorities are warning about
- Suspect in Philadelphia triple stabbing shot by police outside City Hall
- X loses revenue as advertisers halt spending on platform over Elon Musk's posts
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- The Essentials: As Usher lights up the Las Vegas strip, here are his must-haves
- See Jennifer Garner Hilariously Show Off All of the Nuts Hidden in Her Bag
- Writer John Nichols, author of ‘The Milagro Beanfield War’ with a social justice streak, dies at 83
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- WWE Hall of Famer Tammy ‘Sunny’ Sytch sentenced to 17 years in prison for fatal DUI crash
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Why Rachel Bilson Accidentally Ditched Adam Brody for the Olsen Twins Amid Peak O.C. Fame
- Texas man who said racists targeted his home now facing arson charges after fatal house fire
- Trump embraces the Jan. 6 rioters on the trail. In court, his lawyers hope to distance him from them
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Sports Illustrated is the latest media company damaged by an AI experiment gone wrong
- Why it took 17 days for rescuers in India to get to 41 workers trapped in a mountain tunnel
- The Best TikTok Gifts for Teens They’ll Actually Love and Want
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
Climate contradictions key at UN talks. Less future warming projected, yet there’s more current pain
Coal power, traffic, waste burning a toxic smog cocktail in Indonesia’s Jakarta
Harry Jowsey Gifts DWTS' Rylee Arnold $14,000 Bracelet as They Spend Thanksgiving Together
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Latest projection points to modest revenue boost for Maine government
The Hilarious Reason Why Dolly Parton Only Uses Fax and Not Text Messages
Meet 'Samba': The vape-sniffing K9 dog in Florida schools used to crack down on vaping