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Monitoring the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic: Prevalence of Antibodies in a Large, Repetitive Cross-Sectional Study of Blood Donors in Germany—Results from the SeBluCo Study 2020–2022

Authors :
Ruth Offergeld
Karina Preußel
Thomas Zeiler
Konstanze Aurich
Barbara I. Baumann-Baretti
Sandra Ciesek
Victor M. Corman
Viktoria Dienst
Christian Drosten
Siegfried Görg
Andreas Greinacher
Marica Grossegesse
Sebastian Haller
Hans-Gert Heuft
Natalie Hofmann
Peter A. Horn
Claudia Houareau
Ilay Gülec
Carlos Luis Jiménez Klingberg
David Juhl
Monika Lindemann
Silke Martin
Hannelore K. Neuhauser
Andreas Nitsche
Julia Ohme
Sven Peine
Ulrich J. Sachs
Lars Schaade
Richard Schäfer
Heinrich Scheiblauer
Martin Schlaud
Michael Schmidt
Markus Umhau
Tanja Vollmer
Franz F. Wagner
Lothar H. Wieler
Hendrik Wilking
Malte Ziemann
Marlow Zimmermann
Matthias an der Heiden
Source :
Pathogens; Volume 12; Issue 4; Pages: 551
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2023.

Abstract

SARS-CoV-2 serosurveillance is important to adapt infection control measures and estimate the degree of underreporting. Blood donor samples can be used as a proxy for the healthy adult population. In a repeated cross-sectional study from April 2020 to April 2021, September 2021, and April/May 2022, 13 blood establishments collected 134,510 anonymised specimens from blood donors in 28 study regions across Germany. These were tested for antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and nucleocapsid, including neutralising capacity. Seroprevalence was adjusted for test performance and sampling and weighted for demographic differences between the sample and the general population. Seroprevalence estimates were compared to notified COVID-19 cases. The overall adjusted SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence remained below 2% until December 2020 and increased to 18.1% in April 2021, 89.4% in September 2021, and to 100% in April/May 2022. Neutralising capacity was found in 74% of all positive specimens until April 2021 and in 98% in April/May 2022. Our serosurveillance allowed for repeated estimations of underreporting from the early stage of the pandemic onwards. Underreporting ranged between factors 5.1 and 1.1 in the first two waves of the pandemic and remained well below 2 afterwards, indicating an adequate test strategy and notification system in Germany.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20760817
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pathogens; Volume 12; Issue 4; Pages: 551
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....25713c9b23c53a256f7c52477047ac77
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens12040551