FRANKFURT - Pfizer and BioNTech on Monday said trial results showed their coronavirus vaccine was safe and produced a robust immune response in children aged five to 11, adding that they would seek regulatory approval shortly.
The vaccine would be administered at a lower dosage than for people over 12, they said.
"In participants five to 11 years of age, the vaccine was safe, well tolerated and showed robust neutralising antibody responses," US giant Pfizer and its German partner said in a joint statement.
They plan to submit their data to regulatory bodies in the European Union, the United States and around the world "as soon as possible".
The trial results are the first of their kind for children under 12, with a Moderna trial for six-11 year olds still ongoing.
Both the Pfizer and Moderna jabs are already being administered to adolescents over 12 and adults in countries around the globe.
Although children are considered less at risk of severe Covid, there are concerns that the highly contagious Delta variant could lead to more serious cases.
Innoculating children is also seen as key to keeping schools open and helping end the pandemic.
Among the most commonly reported side effects in the past have been pain and swelling at the injection site as well as headache, chills and fever.
Israel has already given special authorisation to vaccinate children aged 5-11 who are "at significant risk of serious illness or death" from Covid, using the Pfizer jab at the lower dosage.
Pfizer and BioNTech are also trialling their vaccine on infants aged six months to two years, and on children aged two to five.
The topline results for those trials are expected "as soon as" the fourth quarter of this year, the companies said.
All together, up to 4,500 children aged six months to 11 years have enrolled in the Pfizer-BioNTech trials in the US, Finland, Poland and Spain.
Like its Moderna rival, the Pfizer jab is based on novel mRNA technology that delivers genetic instructions to cells to build the coronavirus spike protein, in order to evoke antibodies when bodies encounter the real virus.
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