Amid an explosive surge of new coronavirus infections across Europe, the EMA said it expected to make a decision on this within weeks.
Amsterdam: The European Medicines Agency on Monday said that they are evaluating whether to authorise booster doses of Johnson & Johnson’s single-shot COVID-19 vaccine. The agency released a statement stating that the EU drug regulator was considering an application from J&J to recommend booster doses of the J&J vaccine for adults 18 and over, at least two months after they were first immunised
Amid an explosive surge of new coronavirus infections across Europe, the EMA said it expected to make a decision on this within weeks
The US Food and Drug Administration gave the green light to J&J booster doses in October, both for people who initially received the J&J and vaccine and for people who got immunised with other vaccines
J&J earlier presented results from a large study that found giving a second dose just two months after the first bumped protection against symptomatic COVID-19 to 94% from 70% in US recipients.
Giving that booster six months later instead prompted an even bigger jump in virus-fighting antibodies.
EU countries initially ordered about 200 million doses of J&J’s vaccine, but only a fraction have been delivered after the company has faced repeated production problems.
The EMA has previously said its 27 nations could consider administering booster doses of vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna for people who had received the two-dose regimens at least six months before, noting that a third shot would provide additional antibodies against COVID-19.