CDC Tries To Tackle Myocarditis Risk From mRNA Vaccine With New Recommendation

CDC Tries To Tackle Myocarditis Risk From mRNA Vaccine With New Recommendation

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have stated that men between the ages of 12 to 39 can now increase the time between the first and second dose of the mRNA COVID vaccine in order to help reduce the risk of myocarditis.

Well, that was certainly very nice of them to allow that, isn’t it?

“The agency announced on Tuesday that male patients could receive the second shot eight weeks after the first, instead of waiting, as previously advised, three weeks in the case of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine or four weeks in the case of the Moderna vaccine. The CDC urged men to take caution about myocarditis, the rare cardiac episode which causes inflammation of the heart muscle that can reduce the heart’s ability to pump and cause arrhythmias. While the risk exists, the top public health agency insists the condition is rare,” the Washington Examiner reported.

“Some studies in adolescents (ages 12-17 years) and adults have shown the small risk of myocarditis associated with mRNA COVID-19 vaccines might be reduced, and peak antibody responses and vaccine effectiveness may be increased with an interval longer than 4 weeks,” the updated guidance stated.

Here’s more from The Washington Examiner report:

The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, its panel of vaccine experts, convened earlier this month to weigh the benefits and risks of widening the time interval between doses for the male 12-39 age group.

“Months late, but good to see this now as official guidance,” Dr. Walid Gellad, who serves as a professor of medicine for the University of Pittsburgh, who has been very outspoken on the issue. “8-week interval may be optimal for some people between covid vax dose 1 and 2, especially for young men.”

The ACIP panel disclosed last June that “data available to date suggest likely association of myocarditis with mRNA vaccination in adolescents and young adults.”

Thus far, the CDC has received over 1,861 unverified reports of myocarditis and 1,106 reports of pericarditis, a type of cardiac inflammation that causes irritation of the thin sac-like membrane surrounding the heart, in people who received either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines. The bulk of those cases was reported after the second dose.

“In a separate Israeli study measuring the instance of myocarditis in mRNA vaccine recipients, researchers concluded that of roughly 2.5 million vaccinated healthcare workers, only 10.69 cases per 100,000 occurred, primarily in men between the ages of 16 and 29. The study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine in December 2021, found that a total of 76% of cases of myocarditis were described as mild and 22% as intermediate,” the report said.

The original three-and four-week intervals are still the recommendation for the vast majority of individuals, particularly seniors and the close to 7 million folks in the nation who have compromised immune systems.

As of now, almost 65 percent of Americans who are five and older have now been fully vaccinated, while 45 percent of people who are 12 and older have already received the booster dose of the vaccine.