The Food and Drug Administration yesterday announced it has amended the emergency use authorizations for Pfizer’s and Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccines to account for new, bivalent formulations designed to install immunity against the SARS-CoV-2 omicron variant. FDA will refer to the bivalent doses in literature as “updated doses,” which contain two messenger RNA components of SARS-CoV-2 virus: one of the original strain of SARS-CoV-2 and the other one in common between the BA.4 and BA.5 lineages of the omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2. 
 
According to the FDA, individuals 18 years of age and older are eligible for a single booster dose of the Moderna COVID-19 Vaccine, Bivalent if they are at least two months removed from the completion of their primary vaccination series or have received the most recent booster dose with any authorized or approved monovalent COVID-19 vaccine. The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine, Bivalent booster is authorized as a single booster dose for individuals 12 years of age and older who are at least two months removed from the completion of their completed primary vaccination or have received the most recent booster dose with any authorized or approved monovalent COVID-19 vaccine. 
 
The EUA expressly instructs providers to no longer use the monovalent booster shots; instead, patients are to be rescheduled for on-the-books booster appointments and return after the bivalent boosters’ official approval. 
 
In related news, the American Medical Association announced an editorial update to Current Procedural Terminology with eight new codes for the Pfizer and Moderna bivalent COVID-19 vaccine booster doses. 

Related News Articles

Headline
Pfizer yesterday announced its application for an emergency use authorization for a COVID-19 vaccine booster that is designed to protect against the SARS-CoV-2…
Headline
Novavax today announced the Food and Drug Administration expanded the emergency use authorization for its Adjuvanted (NVX-CoV2373) COVID-19 vaccine. Under…
Headline
Hospital leaders from the AHA’s vaccine confidence initiative share tips for building COVID-19 vaccine confidence. “Getting more Americans vaccinated against…
Blog
This is a confusing time in the public health emergency. Americans are thinking less about COVID-19 on a daily basis and many are eager to move on. But COVID-…
Chairperson's File
Remaining resilient as new variants of COVID-19 spread. Launching mobile health services to help ensure equitable distribution of COVID-19 vaccines. Partnering…
Headline
The Department of Health and Human Services has agreed to purchase 66 million doses of Moderna’s omicron-specific COVID-19 vaccine booster for use this fall if…