MHRA statement on booster doses of Pfizer and AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccines
Thursday, 9 September 2021 12:50
It will be for the JVCI to advise on whether booster jabs will be
given and if so, which vaccines should be used. Dr June Raine, MHRA
Chief Executive said: We are committed to getting safe and
effective COVID-19 vaccines to the UK public. This means ensuring
that existing COVID-19 vaccines can continue to be used in the most
effective way possible. We know that a person’s immunity may
decline over time after their first vaccine course. I am pleased
to...Request free trial
It will be for the JVCI to advise on whether booster
jabs will be given and if so, which vaccines should be used.
Dr June Raine, MHRA Chief Executive said:
We are committed to getting safe and effective COVID-19
vaccines to the UK public. This means ensuring that existing
COVID-19 vaccines can continue to be used in the most effective
way possible.
We know that a person’s immunity may decline over time after
their first vaccine course. I am pleased to confirm that the
COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer and AstraZeneca can be used as
safe and effective booster doses. This is an important
regulatory change as it gives further options for the
vaccination programme, which has saved thousands of lives so
far. It will now be for the JVCI to advise on whether booster
jabs will be given and if so, which vaccines should be used.
We have in place a comprehensive safety surveillance strategy
for monitoring the safety of all UK-approved COVID-19 vaccines
and this surveillance will include booster jabs.
Background
-
The current supply of the COVID-19 vaccines made by Pfizer
and AstraZeneca has been authorised on an emergency use basis
by the MHRA under Regulation 174 of the Human Medicine
Regulations 2012 and the changes today have been made to the
Regulation 174 Product Information only. Both vaccines are
also authorised under Conditional Marketing Authorisations
(CMAs) but changes to these would follow a different
procedure. Vaccines covered by CMAs can also be used as part
of a deployment programme via “off-label” use under a
prescriber’s direction.
-
This regulatory decision follows a careful review of
available data on safety and effectiveness of booster or
supplementary vaccine doses by the MHRA and the independent
Commission on Human
Medicines (CHM), which advises the government.
-
For more information, please see the product information:
AstraZeneca
vaccine, Pfizer vaccine
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