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SARS-CoV-2 infection in Africa: a systematic review and meta-analysis of standardised seroprevalence studies, from January 2020 to December 2021

Authors :
Anthony Nardone
Jesse Papenburg
Marta Valenciano
Hude Quan
Maria D Van Kerkhove
Didier K Ekouevi
Tyler Williamson
Shobna Sawry
Xiaomeng Ma
Ambrose Talisuna
Thierno Balde
Ines Vigan-Womas
David Buckeridge
Halidou Tinto
Michael Liu
Tingting Yan
Matthew P Cheng
Joseph Okeibunor
Samiratou Ouedraogo
Francine Ntoumi
Cheikh Talla
David Clifton
Tiffany G Harris
Ayôla A Adegnika
Lorenzo Subissi
Laura Steinhardt
Niklas Bobrovitz
Isidore T Traore
Timothy G Evans
Judy Chen
Cedric P Yansouni
Cheryl Cohen
Jason M Mwenda
Nsenga Ngoy
Hannah C Lewis
Harriet Ware
Mairead Whelan
Zihan Li
Brianna Cheng
Kim Noel
Christian Cao
Mercedes Yanes-Lane
Belinda L Herring
Rahul K Arora
Isabel Bergeri
Rafiou Adamou
Samira Z Assoumou
Rosemary A Audu
Jacob S Barnor
Enyew Birru
Henry K Bosa
Emily L Boucher
Annie Chauma-Mwale
Tienhan S Dabakuyo-Yonli
Gabriel Deveaux
Boly Diop
Titus H Divala
Emily K Dokubo
Irene O Donkor
Claire Donnici
Nathan Duarte
Natalie A Duarte
Paulin N Essone
Lee Fairlie
Ousmane Faye
Anne von Gottberg
Natasha Ilincic
Elsie A Ilori
Jackie Kleynhans
Dayoung Kim
Olatunji M Kolawole
Jambo C Kondwani
Emma Loeschnik
Sheila Makiala-Mandanda
Alexandre Manirakiza
Pinyi N Mawien
Portia C Mutevedzi
Edgard B Ngoungou
Eric M Osoro
Sandrine L Oyegue
Sara Perlman-Arrow
Hannah P Rahim
Karampreet Sachathep
Mitchell Segal
Anabel Selemon
Judith Shang
Joel F Djoba Siawaya
Kristen A Stafford
Joe A Theu
Caseng Zhang
Source :
BMJ Global Health, Vol 7, Iss 8 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Estimating COVID-19 cumulative incidence in Africa remains problematic due to challenges in contact tracing, routine surveillance systems and laboratory testing capacities and strategies. We undertook a meta-analysis of population-based seroprevalence studies to estimate SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence in Africa to inform evidence-based decision making on public health and social measures (PHSM) and vaccine strategy.Methods We searched for seroprevalence studies conducted in Africa published 1 January 2020–30 December 2021 in Medline, Embase, Web of Science and Europe PMC (preprints), grey literature, media releases and early results from WHO Unity studies. All studies were screened, extracted, assessed for risk of bias and evaluated for alignment with the WHO Unity seroprevalence protocol. We conducted descriptive analyses of seroprevalence and meta-analysed seroprevalence differences by demographic groups, place and time. We estimated the extent of undetected infections by comparing seroprevalence and cumulative incidence of confirmed cases reported to WHO.PROSPERO: CRD42020183634.Results We identified 56 full texts or early results, reporting 153 distinct seroprevalence studies in Africa. Of these, 97 (63%) were low/moderate risk of bias studies. SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence rose from 3.0% (95% CI 1.0% to 9.2%) in April–June 2020 to 65.1% (95% CI 56.3% to 73.0%) in July–September 2021. The ratios of seroprevalence from infection to cumulative incidence of confirmed cases was large (overall: 100:1, ranging from 18:1 to 954:1) and steady over time. Seroprevalence was highly heterogeneous both within countries—urban versus rural (lower seroprevalence for rural geographic areas), children versus adults (children aged 0–9 years had the lowest seroprevalence)—and between countries and African subregions.Conclusion We report high seroprevalence in Africa suggesting greater population exposure to SARS-CoV-2 and potential protection against COVID-19 severe disease than indicated by surveillance data. As seroprevalence was heterogeneous, targeted PHSM and vaccination strategies need to be tailored to local epidemiological situations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20597908
Volume :
7
Issue :
8
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Global Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.44a4cf7a28b408ca4de2779c44026fb
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2022-008793