Correcting for Antibody Waning in Cumulative Incidence Estimation from Sequential Serosurveys.
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BORIS DOI
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
38012125
Description
Serosurveys are a widely used tool to estimate the cumulative incidence, i.e. the fraction of a population that have been infected by a given pathogen. These surveys rely on serological assays that measure the level of pathogen-specific antibodies. Because antibody levels are waning, the fraction of previously infected individuals that have sero-reverted increases with time past infection. To avoid underestimating the true cumulative incidence, it is therefore essential to correct for waning antibody levels. We present an empirically-supported approach for sero-reversion correction in cumulative incidence estimation when sequential serosurveys are conducted in the context of a newly emerging infectious disease. The correction is based on the observed dynamics of antibody titers in sero-positive cases and validated using several in silico test scenarios. Furthermore, through this approach we revise a previous cumulative incidence estimate, which relies on the assumption of an exponentially-declining probability of sero-reversion over time, of SARS-CoV-2 of 76% in Manaus, Brazil, by October 2020 to 47.6% (43.5% - 53.5%). This estimate has implications e.g. for the proximity to herd immunity in Manaus in late 2020.
Date of Publication
2024-05-07
Publication Type
Article
Keyword(s)
SARS-CoV-2 cumulative incidence infectious disease serosurveys
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Kadelka, Sarah | |
Ashcroft, Peter | |
Regoes, Roland R |
Additional Credits
Series
American journal of epidemiology
Publisher
Oxford University Press
ISSN
0002-9262
Access(Rights)
open.access