Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Second vaccine dose can be delayed briefly: panel

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2021 06:47 PM
  • Second vaccine dose can be delayed briefly: panel

Canada's national panel of vaccine experts says people eligible to get a COVID-19 vaccine should get both doses on schedule but if vaccine supplies are limited and the pandemic situation is dire, delaying the second dose a few more weeks is acceptable.

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization, or NACI, is also reminding Canadians that even if you're vaccinated you must still follow public health advice to wear masks, keep your distance from others and avoid crowds, because it is still unknown whether someone who has received the shot could still spread the novel coronavirus.

The two COVID-19 vaccines approved for use in Canada both require two doses, with Pfizer and BioNTech's vaccine label requiring two doses given 21 days apart, and Moderna's needing two doses 28 days apart.

In new recommendations issued late Tuesday, NACI said every effort should be made to follow those dosing schedules but notes there can be exceptions, particularly when vaccine supplies are so hard to come by and the spread of the virus in a given jurisdiction is rapid.

"Model-based studies suggest population health benefits may be greater with a more balanced approach that does not withhold doses during early distribution in order to vaccinate more people as soon as possible, when early supplies of highly efficacious COVID-19 vaccines are constrained," the advice reads.

They said that with other vaccines, waiting longer than recommended to give a second dose hasn't typically reduced the final level of immunity to a disease but the data for the COVID-19 vaccines is still lacking that information.

Most recipients in the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna trials got their second doses on schedule but in both cases some didn't get it for as long as 42 days after the first.

The World Health Organization has also suggested that waiting up to six weeks after the first dose is an acceptable compromise. The United Kingdom is delaying second doses up to 12 weeks, and Denmark by six weeks. Germany is among the countries also considering delaying the second dose.

Canada is getting enough vaccine doses to vaccinate the vast majority of Canadians by the fall but the bulk of that won't happen until later in the spring and summer and provinces are warning they're going to run out of doses.

Almost 550,000 doses have now arrived in Canada and about 71 per cent of them injected, with another 380,000 doses scheduled to arrive by the end of the week. About one per cent of the Canadian population has received at least one dose to date.

Clinical trials on the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines both showed the first dose provided some protection against serious illness from COVID-19, but the majority of patients in both trials received a second dose on schedule, leaving very limited data on how long the protection from the first dose lasts.

Dr. Supriya Sharma, Health Canada's chief medical adviser, said last week determining the effectiveness of the vaccines after the first dose is based on a sort of "back-of-the-envelope" calculation and the methods differ depending on when you start measuring.

It can take up to two weeks after a vaccine for the body's full immune response to be in place.

Reviews of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which looked at how many people acquired and had symptoms of COVID-19 from the day after the first injection, found the first dose prevented illness in about half the patients monitored. But when the data was measured only starting two weeks after the first injection, effectiveness at preventing symptoms of COVID-19 was about 92 per cent.

For Moderna, the first dose was effective at preventing serious illness in 80 per cent of patients when the measurement starts the day after the dose is given, and also 92 per cent if starting to measure after two weeks have passed.

The problem with that is that for Pfizer, the majority of patients in the study were given the second dose on day 21, leaving just one week to measure the first dose's effectiveness, and for Moderna, on day 28, leaving just two weeks to measure.

"You're looking at really short time periods, right, when you're counting cases (of COVID-19), said Sharma in an interview with The Canadian Press. "The studies weren't set up to do that. So, you know, it's kind of a back-of-the-envelope calculation."

There is also almost no data to understand how long that first dose remained effective without getting a second one because more than 90 per cent of patients in both vaccine trials got that second dose.

NACI's recommendations say if the second dose is delayed those patients must be followed so more evidence of the impact can be attained.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two die after fish boat sinks off Vancouver Island

Two die after fish boat sinks off Vancouver Island
The British Columbia Coroners Service says two people have died after a Canadian fishing boat sank in waters west of Vancouver Island.

Two die after fish boat sinks off Vancouver Island

WATCH: Russia Approves First Covid19 Vaccine | AirCanada To ReOpen India Route | Cases Rise in BC #covid19

WATCH:  Russia Approves First Covid19 Vaccine | AirCanada To ReOpen India Route | Cases Rise in BC #covid19
Russia approves the world's first COVID-19 vaccine, Putin claims tested on own daughter, but scientific community is skeptical.

WATCH: Russia Approves First Covid19 Vaccine | AirCanada To ReOpen India Route | Cases Rise in BC #covid19

Rigorous private school plans show education inequities

Rigorous private school plans show education inequities
With children in both public and private schools, Toronto mom Karuna Satov is weighing two very different back-to-school pandemic plans.

Rigorous private school plans show education inequities

Return to B.C. classrooms pushed back

Return to B.C. classrooms pushed back
British Columbia's education minister says students won't be back in classrooms on the originally planned date of Sept. 8.

Return to B.C. classrooms pushed back

Ottawa launches revised CEWS calculator

Ottawa launches revised CEWS calculator
The federal government has launched an updated calculator to help employers estimate what help they might receive from the next phase of the Canada Emergency Wage Subsidy.

Ottawa launches revised CEWS calculator

Aid to Lebanon a signal of long-term help: Gould

Aid to Lebanon a signal of long-term help: Gould
Canada's decision to increase its humanitarian aid to Lebanon recognizes the country already faced significant turmoil before last week's explosion and will need long-term support, International Development Minister Karina Gould said Tuesday.

Aid to Lebanon a signal of long-term help: Gould