CDC: Some immunocompromised people can get fourth vaccine dose

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) issued updated guidance Monday saying some immunocompromised people can get a fourth COVID-19 vaccine dose for additional protection.

The federal agency permits moderately and severely immunocompromised adults to get a fourth booster shot if they completed an initial series of an mRNA vaccine and received a third additional dose. The fourth shot can be administered six months after the most recent dose.

The adjusted recommendations come days after the CDC approved mix-and-match booster shots, where a person receives a different brand dose from their initial vaccination. 

Under this guidance, moderately and severely immunocompromised people who got the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines for their first three shots can get a different booster shot if desired.

The CDC distinguished the definitions for additional dose and booster shot, saying an additional dose referred to a subsequent shot for people thought not to have an adequate immune response to the initial vaccine series.

Booster shots, on the other hand, refer to a subsequent dose given to those whose protection from the initial vaccine series is expected to have decreased over time. 

The CDC officially advised immunocompromised people to get a third additional dose of an mRNA vaccine in August, so the earliest third dose recipients would not be eligible for a fourth shot until February. The additional third shot was recommended at least 28 days after the second dose. 

Immunocompromised Johnson & Johnson recipients received different instructions to get a single COVID-19 booster shot at least two months after their initial dose, just like all adults who got the single-dose shot. 

The federal agency granted the option for specific Moderna and Johnson & Johnson recipients to get booster shots last week following a unanimous advisory panel vote. 

While all Johnson & Johnson-vaccinated adults are advised to get a booster, the CDC recommended the extra shot to certain vulnerable Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech populations, including those aged 65 and older, those in long-term care facilities and those aged 50 to 64 with underlying medical conditions.

The CDC also granted the option of a booster dose following an mRNA vaccine to other adults with underlying medical conditions and adults at risk of contracting COVID-19 due to their occupational or institutional setting. 

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was authorized to be given to these populations last month, ahead of the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson booster approvals. 

Tags BioNTech Booster dose boosters CDC Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Coronavirus COVID-19 COVID-19 booster COVID-19 vaccine Johnson and Johnson Moderna Pandemic Pfizer

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