U.S. officials and drugmakers are starting to promote new vaccines for respiratory syncytial virus in hopes that seniors will accept a trifecta of RSV, flu and COVID-19 shots to keep their lungs and hospital rooms clear this fall.
Doctors urge patients to get annual flu shots, and Dr. Anthony Fauci and pop star Olivia Rodrigo twisted Americans’ arms to allow pharmacists to poke them with COVID-19 shots during the pandemic crisis.
Drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline is running ads and enlisting NBA legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson to raise awareness about RSV for older adults, a virus that commonly infects infants but can be deadly in older people especially those with underlying health conditions.
Federal officials recommend the RSV vaccines for people 60 and older under a “shared clinical decision-making” framework. That means patients and doctors should discuss the vaccine instead of treating it as an automatic recommendation.
Medical experts say older patients, particularly those with heart and lung issues, will be prime candidates for the three shots designed to protect against RSV, flu and COVID-19.
“I’d think there will be a substantial number of people who say, ‘OK, two at the same time, but I’ll come back for the third. That third shot is likely to be RSV, and I think we’ll have to be persuasive to get them back for that third visit,” said William Schaffner, an infectious diseases specialist at Vanderbilt University. “This going to be a learning year.”
RSV has been a health risk for a long time, but it hit hard last fall, raising concerns about a “triple pandemic” alongside the flu and lingering COVID-19. The diseases peaked early, around November, though drugmakers released clinical data showing their shots could thwart RSV in people 60 and older.
Drugmakers and immunization managers are spreading the word among senior homes and doctors serving older patients.
“The large amount of disease we had last year definitely spiked some interest. Providers who are aware of the burden of disease from RSV are delighted to have these new vaccines for their 60-and-older patients,” said Litjen Tan, chief policy and partnerships officer at Immunize.org, which promotes vaccination through educational materials for the public and health professionals.
He said public interest is hard to gauge, though the rough season last year put RSV on people’s radar.
All three shots can be administered at once, though Dr. Tan said “most adult patients are unlikely to accept three vaccines at the same time, and so having the patient come back may be necessary.”
More than 9 in 10 American seniors got a two-dose primary series for COVID-19, but roughly 43% of them bothered to get an updated booster last fall, according to federal data. Flu shot coverage is trending in a better direction. It exceeded 70% of seniors as of March, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Adding a third shot will be a key test of seniors’ willingness to roll up their sleeves this fall. Interest in the COVID-19 shots lagged over time, and the pandemic and associated mandates fueled an era of vaccine hesitancy in activist circles and corners of the internet.
“We anticipate a harder effort to get people to come get vaccinated,” said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers. “I think that’s why it’s so important to educate the providers, really talking to patients about the importance of getting all three vaccines.”
In May, the Food and Drug Administration approved the GSK vaccine, which has the brand name Arexvy. The company estimates that the RSV vaccine would benefit nearly 56 million American seniors.
GSK pointed to federal data showing that RSV causes about 177,000 hospitalizations and an estimated 14,000 deaths of U.S. seniors yearly.
Pfizer’s version has the brand name ABRYSVO.
The vaccines were granted priority review status, which directs regulatory attention to drugs and vaccines that would be “significant improvements” over existing pharmaceuticals or treatments.
The CDC endorsed both vaccines in June. Agency spokeswoman Kathleen Conley said doctors and patients should consider whether the patient has any chronic medical conditions or other risk factors that increase their risk of severe RSV disease, possible side effects such as fever or soreness at the injection site, and “the patient’s preference around getting the shot.”
Regulators said last month that Pfizer’s version could be given to pregnant women so they confer immunity to their babies in the first six months after birth. It is the first RSV vaccine for maternal use and will draw more attention to the new shots.
“We’re going to encourage Americans to get their updated COVID-19 vaccine, in addition to their annual flu shot,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Aug. 28. “And RSV immunization for people over 60 and for infants. That is something that we’re going to continue to make very clear to Americans across the country.”
GSK launched a television campaign to promote its vaccine for older adults. The ad is broadcast on all major network stations and online during shows such as “Today,” “Good Morning America,” “The Big Bang Theory” and “Nightly News.”
“RSV can be serious. Talk to your doctor or pharmacist about Arexvy today,” says the one-minute ad, touting its position as the first FDA-approved shot to protect against the virus. “RSV? Make it Arexvy.”
Mr. Johnson, the former Los Angeles Lakers star, is urging older adults to talk to their pharmacist or doctor about RSV vaccination through the “Sideline RSV” campaign.
GSK said its RSV vaccines were thoroughly tested for safety and efficacy, proving 82.6% effective against RSV in older adults over one season and 67.2% over the cumulative course of two seasons. Against severe RSV, it was 94% effective over one season and nearly 79% effective over two seasons.
The company said it will highlight its data and use trusted voices to try to overcome vaccine hesitancy lingering from the public health crisis.
“The vast majority of the U.S. public has confidence in the safety and efficacy of vaccines,” the company said. “In recent years the public has been caught up with ‘vaccination fatigue’ following the pandemic, and we are staying committed to ensuring that patients and healthcare providers, such as doctors, pharmacists, nurses, public health officials — have access to accurate information.”
Pfizer told CDC advisers in June that its shot was 78.6% effective against severe RSV through the middle of a second season and nearly 90% effective after the first season.
Experts say health care professionals will use the coming year to determine whether the vaccines last long enough that annual shots are unnecessary.
The “bottom line is both vaccines appear to be effective at preventing serious RSV disease in older adults, and individuals ages 60 years and older should talk with their health care provider to see if the benefit of getting the vaccine outweighs the risks, based on their individual medical history,” said Michelle Fiscus, the chief medical officer at the Association of Immunization Managers.
Besides Moderna, Pfizer is a main player in providing COVID-19 vaccines and boosters that match circulating strains.
The companies told Congress this year that they plan to roughly quadruple the list price of the shots, to about $130, because they are entering the private market and the government is no longer subsidizing purchases.
“We have priced the vaccine to ensure the price is consistent with the value delivered and with the goal of uninterrupted access for every American,” Pfizer said. “We expect that most people will continue to pay nothing out of pocket as the COVID-19 vaccine transitions to the traditional market.”
Pfizer said it has booster shots that combat the XBB lineage ready for distribution pending regulatory guidance.
Ms. Conley said the CDC experts updated COVID-19 boosters generally to be available by mid-to-late September and that “September and October are generally good times to be vaccinated against flu.”
Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the purpose of GSK’s campaign with Earvin “Magic” Johnson. It is to raise awareness around RSV.
• Tom Howell Jr. can be reached at thowell@washingtontimes.com.
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