FDA panel considers a first-of-its-kind flu vaccine using mRNA technology
A US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advisory committee is reviewing Moderna's new mRNA-based flu vaccine, mFlusiva, for individuals aged 50 and older. This vaccine, utilizing the same technology as COVID-19 vaccines, is designed to be faster to manufacture, potentially aiding in rapid responses to flu virus mutations.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) advisory committee is reviewing Moderna's new mRNA-based flu vaccine, mFlusiva, for individuals aged 50 and older. This vaccine, utilizing the same technology as COVID-19 vaccines, is designed to be faster to manufacture, potentially aiding in rapid responses to flu virus mutations. A study of 40,000 participants showed mFlusiva reduced flu cases by approximately 27% compared to a standard vaccine. The FDA has published a favorable review of the data, noting no safety concerns, though additional testing is needed for frail older adults and those with weakened immune systems. The committee's discussion is a step towards a final decision before the winter flu season.
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5 extractedFDA published a favorable review of Moderna's data and reported no safety concerns ahead of the advisory committee meeting.
Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine reduced flu cases by about 27% compared to a routinely used vaccine in a study of 40,000 people aged 50 and older.
FDA panel is considering a new flu vaccine from Moderna using mRNA technology.
A dispute occurred earlier this year where an FDA official blocked Moderna's application, questioning the comparison vaccine used.
mRNA vaccines are faster to manufacture than other types, potentially aiding rapid response to flu virus mutations.