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Wednesday, August 31, 2022

California won’t expand teen vaccines without parental OK

 California won’t allow teens age 15 and up to be vaccinated against the coronavirus without their parents’ consent.

State Sen. Scott Wiener, the bill’s author, announced Wednesday he won’t put the measure up for a vote in the state Assembly because it doesn’t have enough support to pass.

Minors age 12 to 17 in California already can receive vaccinations for hepatitis B and HPV, which prevent sexually transmitted diseases, without permission from their parents or guardians. The bill would have allowed teens 15 and older to receive any vaccine that has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, even if their parents objected.

Wiener, a Democrat from San Francisco, blamed the lack of support on “months of harassment and misinformation” by “a small but highly vocal and organized minority of anti-vaxxers.”

“The anti-vaxxers may have prevailed in this particular fight, but the broader fight for science and health continues,” he said in a statement.

A coalition of groups opposed to vaccine mandates called it a “blatant, dangerous trampling of California parents’ and guardians’ ability to protect and care for their children.”

A Voice for Choice Advocacy said minors may not know their full medical history and the potential risks. And if they don’t tell their parents that they obtained the vaccine on their own, the group said parents may not know what’s wrong if their child has an adverse reaction.

Vaccine consent ages vary across the country. Alabama allows children to consent to vaccines starting at age 14, Oregon at 15 and Rhode Island and South Carolina at 16. Cities including Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., allow children age 11 and up to consent to COVID-19 vaccines, and in San Francisco the age is 12 and older.

The teen consent bill was one several coronavirus-related bills that faced heavy opposition.

Gov. Gavin Newsom and Democratic Sen. Richard Pan both delayed until next year measures relating to school vaccinations, while Democratic Assemblymember Buffy Wicks withdrew her bill that would have forced all California businesses to require coronavirus vaccines for their employees.

Another Pan bill still moving forward would require schools create COVID-19 testing plans.

Also still under consideration are a bill by Democratic Assemblymember Evan Low that would make doctors spreading coronavirus misinformation or disinformation subject to discipline for professional misconduct, and one by Democratic Assemblymember Akilah Weber that would require health care providers, schools, child care facilities and others to disclose certain patient information to the California Department of Public Health and local health officials.

https://apnews.com/article/covid-health-san-francisco-misinformation-scott-wiener-394e55ed292f16b900343c5e6ada64f8

Georgia elementary school notifies families about case of monkeypox

 A school in Gwinnett County is reporting a case of monkeypox at one of its elementary schools.

According to a letter sent home to school families, an “individual at our school” tested positive. The school says they are taking the situation very seriously and the risk of monkeypox transmission in a school setting is “very minimal.”

The individual in question will remain off campus until cleared to return by medical professionals, according to the letter.

The letter also says that if parents were not “specifically notified with separate communication,” their child was not identified as having close contact with a known case.

The school told CBS46 that it will not share further information about the case because of privacy laws, including the gender or age of the victim. However, the health department confirmed that the person who has been infected is an adult.

Some students in the area said it is still concerning.

“Definitely a little bit, especially with the whole scare with Covid,” Sydney Spayd, a Dacula High student, said. “Just want to make sure nothing else happens.”

READ LETTER BELOW

Dear Dacula Elementary School families,

GNR Public Health notified Gwinnett County Public Schools (GCPS) today that an individual at our school has tested positive for the monkeypox virus. I want to reassure you, we are taking this situation very seriously and the risk of monkeypox transmission in a school setting is very minimal. The individual in question will remain off campus until cleared to return to school by medical officials.

In accordance with CDC guidelines, GCPS is currently contact tracing and will notify parents of any students considered to be close contacts to the affected individual. Please understand that due to HIPAA and FERPA regulations, we cannot release specific information regarding individuals.

If you are not specifically notified with separate communication, your child was not identified as having close contact with a known case, and it is highly unlikely your child was exposed.

It is very important to know that monkeypox is spread through close, direct skin-to-skin contact. While the risk of transmission is very low in a school setting, we wanted to inform you of this potential exposure. Our school facilities personnel will thoroughly clean and disinfect all affected areas of the school.

Monkeypox is a virus that causes a rash that first appears like flat spots then changes into raised bumps and then fluid-filled blisters. The person may also have a fever, headache, sore throat and or cough, and swollen lymph nodes. If you believe your student has monkeypox, please notify our school nurse and your child’s primary care physician. If your student is ill, please keep them at home until they are well and can return to school in accordance with our standard illness policy.

Again, monkeypox spreads through close, personal, skin-to-skin contact, including:

Direct contact with monkeypox rash, scabs, or fluids from the scabs of a person with monkeypox.

Less commonly, monkeypox can also be spread through touching objects, fabrics such as clothing, bedding, or towels, and surfaces that have been used by someone with monkeypox or contact with respiratory secretions.

Clear and transparent two-way communication is a core value at Dacula Elementary School. It is our commitment to keep each and every family updated about important developments at our school. We wanted to make you aware of this situation as soon as possible and assure you that we are taking all possible steps to ensure a safe and healthy learning and working environment for students and staff. You can help us by keeping your student home if he or she is feeling unwell.

If you should have additional questions regarding monkeypox, please contact your doctor or local health department for more information. You can also visit the Georgia Department of Public Health or CDC’s monkeypox webpage for additional information.

According to the CDC, three children in Georgia have been diagnosed by monkeypox. In all three cases, they contracted the virus from someone in their household.

As of Aug. 26, 1,299 cases have been reported in Georgia, placing it in the top 5 of states with highest reported number of cases.

https://www.cbs46.com/2022/08/29/gwinnett-county-elementary-school-notifies-families-about-case-monkeypox/

CDC: Handful of Swine Flu Cases Detected in Humans in Multiple States

 Five cases of human infection with flu variants normally spread only in pigs were reported to CDC in August, the agency announced in a Health Alert Network advisory on Tuesday.

Cases were detected in West Virginia, Oregon, and Ohio, and all of the individuals have since recovered.

According to the CDC, four of the infections were associated with exposure to pigs or involved individuals who had attended an agricultural fair prior to their illness. One of the individuals, however, reported no prior contact with pigs and did not attend an agricultural fair.

"No person-to-person spread associated with the five recent variant influenza virus infections has been identified," the agency stated.

Three of the cases involved the A(H3N2) variant and two involved an influenza A(H1N2) variant.The individuals suffered symptoms similar to seasonal flu, including fever, cough, pharyngitis, myalgia, and headache, and none were hospitalized, the CDC noted.

Including these new cases, 504 swine-related flu infections have been detected since the agency starting tracking the flu variants in 2005.

Medical professionals should ask patients who present with flu if they have had exposure to pigs, CDC advised: "Novel influenza A virus infections, which include those caused by variant influenza viruses, are notifiable conditions in the United States, and all confirmed cases should be reported to CDC within 24 hours."

Medical personnel are urged to take a nasopharyngeal swab or aspirate from the patient, put it in a viral transport medium, and contact the state or local health department to arrange transport and request a timely diagnosis at a state public health laboratory.

Hospitalized patients, those with severe illness, or those with a high risk of influenza complications can be treated with antiviral medication, with treatment initiation recommended within 48 hours of symptom onset, CDC said.

The agency advises that all persons at higher risk of complications of influenza avoid exposure to pigs and "swine barns" at fairs, and if avoidance is not possible, to wear a well-fitted mask that covers the nose and mouth during exposure.

The advisory noted that CDC expects that state health departments may identify more cases of infection with variant influenza viruses across the U.S., especially in late summer and fall when there are more state fairs hosting livestock, including pigs from different geographic locations.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/infectiousdisease/uritheflu/100494

Fall covid boosters: 'Likely safe,' but questions remain about efficacy

 The CDC's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) will weigh in on newly authorized fall COVID boosters this week, in a manner unprecedented during the pandemic -- without data from human clinical trials.

While most experts agree that there are no safety concerns, and many support the FDA's attempt to keep up with viral variants, others have pointed out gray areas and open questions when it comes to Omicron-targeting bivalent vaccines.

That includes whether boosters with components targeting Omicron would offer a significant advantage in terms of efficacy -- particularly, protection against infection -- over boosting against the ancestral strain of the virus alone.

Regulatory Recap

To recap, the regulatory process for fall boosters started earlier this summer. On June 28, the FDA's Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) voted 19-2 to recommend the use of an Omicron-specific component in future boosters. Their review was based on human clinical trial data from a bivalent booster containing the ancestral strain and the BA.1 variant, showing sufficient levels of neutralizing antibodies after the fourth dose.

But most committee members voiced support for a bivalent vaccine that included the ancestral strain plus the BA.4/5 variants, even though data from a human clinical trial wouldn't be available before fall.

That would make the authorization process for this and possibly future COVID boosters similar to that for annual influenza vaccines, which relies on immunogenicity data from mouse studies.

Indeed, Pfizer has presented data from a mouse study, showing that BA.4/5 monovalent and bivalent boosters sufficiently raised neutralizing antibody levels against all Omicron variants.

Pfizer and Moderna are both starting human clinical trials of BA.4/5 boosters this month -- a 30-mcg dose for Pfizer and a 50-mcg dose for Moderna -- but those won't be concluded before shots likely start going into arms in the coming weeks.

The Unknowns

While proponents tout the positives of moving quickly, others have raised several concerns, including not knowing whether a BA.4/5 boost will offer better protection against infection than another boost with the ancestral strain.

Paul Offit, MD, of Children's Hospital Philadelphia, who participated in the June 28 VRBPAC meeting, told MedPage Today that the human data on BA.1 boosters were "underwhelming."

Depending on the company, he said, there was a 1.5-fold to 1.75-fold increase in neutralizing antibody titers in the group that got the bivalent vaccines, and that's "not likely to be a clinically significant difference."

That could be related to "imprinting," Offit said, which is also referred to as "original antigenic sin." The concept is that the immune system response is bolstered against the strain that a person was initially exposed to.

"You largely are hooked into that ancestral strain, so it's hard to boost in a big way with BA.4/5 vaccines," Offit said. "If I gave a monovalent BA.4/5 vaccine to a 10-year-old with no previous vaccination or natural infection, you'd see a dramatic increase in neutralizing antibodies."

Offit maintains that boosters aren't needed in healthy adult populations at all because T-cell responses are conserved and recipients are thus protected against severe disease. Boosters, he said, are beneficial in at-risk groups: older patients (above 70), those with chronic conditions, and the immunocompromised.

John Moore, PhD, professor of microbiology and immunology at Columbia University in New York City, noted that the Pfizer mouse study data actually suggested better results with a monovalent BA.4/5 booster. Thus, it's not clear why a monovalent booster isn't moving forward at this time, he said.

Moore added that recent modeling data -- albeit, a preprint, and not clinical data -- suggest there wouldn't be much of a difference in outcomes if people received a booster of the ancestral strain versus the Omicron-targeted booster.

"A great deal of time, effort, and money have now gone into making new boosters that will be little better than what we already had available in large quantities," Moore told MedPage Today in an email.

He added it would be a "mistake if the public was persuaded that the new boosters are a super strong shield against infection, and hence increased their risk and exposed themselves to more virus."

Several experts also expressed concerns that if the public perceived that the bivalent boosters were problematic because they only have animal data behind them, hesitancy could increase. That's troubling given that only about 30% of the U.S. population has taken a booster dose, they said.

Still others think FDA is on the right track. Robert "Chip" Schooley, MD, an infectious diseases expert at the University of California San Diego, told MedPage Today in an email, "I think the call was the right one."

"Coronavirus-induced immunity (whether vaccine- or infection-driven) wanes quickly and we have a large number of unboosted and under-boosted people in the population and are poised for a recrudescence of infection as people go indoors for the winter," Schooley said. "Thus, there is not time for a comparative trial with clinical efficacy endpoints before the need to roll vaccination out in anticipation of the winter surge."

He said he would have liked to see a clinical trial "embedded in the fall rollout in which people were randomized to a 'legacy' vaccine or a new one with a subset of patients being studied for immunogenicity versus a range of variants and clinical outcomes in the full cohort" -- but that he wouldn't advocate "continuing with the legacy vaccine for the next 6 months, which is what would be required to do a properly controlled clinical trial."

He concluded that COVID vaccines are "likely headed toward where flu vaccines have gone."

That certainly seems to be a foregone conclusion, as Biden administration officials have already touted the value of Omicron-targeted bivalent boosters. White House COVID-19 Response Coordinator Ashish Jha, MD, MPH, called it the "first major upgrade of the vaccines ... in the last two and a half years."

CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, MD, MPH, told the podcast Conversations on Health Care that bivalent boosters "shouldn't impact safety at all."

If the country waits for human data, she said, "we would be using what I would consider to be a potentially outdated vaccine. ... It's best to use a vaccine that's tailored to the variant we have right now."

https://www.medpagetoday.com/special-reports/exclusives/100482

Hepion starts Phase 2b ‘ASCEND-NASH’ Trial

 Hepion Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (NASDAQ:HEPA), a clinical stage biopharmaceutical company focused on Artificial Intelligence (“AI”)-driven therapeutic drug development for the treatment of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (“NASH”), hepatocellular carcinoma (“HCC”), and other chronic liver diseases, today announced that it has screened the first subject in the ASCEND-NASH clinical trial. The trial is being conducted at up to 121 sites in seven countries, with 85 of the sites located within the U.S.

ASCEND-NASH is a Phase 2b, randomized, multi-center, double-blinded study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of rencofilstat in 336 subjects dosed for 12 months. Subjects included in the trial will be either F2 or F3 biopsy-confirmed, with enrollment of F3 subjects of at least 60%, to focus on NASH subjects with more advanced fibrosis. Subjects will receive either placebo or rencofilstat, administered orally once daily at doses of 75, 150, or 225 mg (n=84 subjects/cohort). Endpoints will evaluate improvements in both fibrosis and steatosis, with the overall study primary endpoint being an improvement of fibrosis score by one point without a worsening of steatosis, or an improvement of steatosis without worsening of fibrosis. Although the main trial endpoint is histologic and determined by changes in the biopsy, numerous other non-invasive markers (“NIM”) will be assessed, including NASH efficacy biomarkers, magnetic resonance elastography (“MRE”), and multiomics (e.g. proteomics and transcriptomics).

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/hepion-pharmaceuticals-announces-initiation-phase-120000431.html

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