Two thirds of the world likely had COVID-19 antibodies in their system by late 2021

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Photo by Chromatograph on Unsplash
Photo by Chromatograph on Unsplash

59.2% of the world's population has likely been exposed to either COVID-19, a COVID-19 vaccine or both, according to international experts. Official COVID-19 infection rates that rely on testing can miss cases due to factors including a lack of tests and infections without symptoms, according to the researchers. To try and fill in the gaps, the researchers compiled and analysed studies across the world that tested populations for COVID-19 antibodies, which indicates someone either has had COVID-19 or has been successfully vaccinated. The researchers say antibodies could be detected in 59.2% of people by September 2021, up from 7.7% in June 2020.

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From: PLOS

Peer-reviewed                    Observational study                      People

Global COVID-19 infection rates may be higher than previously reported

Study suggests two-thirds of the global population may have antibodies from vaccination or infection

Serosurveillance provides estimates of antibody levels against infectious diseases and is considered the gold standard for measuring population immunity due to past infection or vaccination. A study publishing November 10th in the open access journal PLOS Medicine jointly authored by the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Unity Studies and SeroTracker and colleagues suggests that based on seroprevalence, global COVID-19 infection rates are likely to be higher than previously reported.

The global scale of COVID-19 infections is not well understood. Routine surveillance data underestimate infection and cannot infer population immunity due to asymptomatic infections and uneven access to diagnostics. In order to ascertain the true rates of infection and indicators of immunity in the population against SARS-CoV-2 over time, researchers conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of seroprevalence studies published from January 1, 2020 to May 20, 2022. From their search parameters, the authors identified 965 distinct seroprevalence studies sampling 5,346,069 participants between January 2020 and April 2022, with 43% of these studies being from low-middle income countries. They analyzed seroprevalence by country and month, estimating regional and global seroprevalence over time, and estimated seropositivity rates from infection versus infection or vaccination.

The researchers found that global seroprevalence has risen from 7.7% in June 2020 to 59.2% in September 2021, suggesting two-thirds of the global population may be SARS-CoV-2 seropositive from either vaccination or infection. Estimates of COVID-19 infections based on seroprevalence data far exceed reported cases, suggesting a bigger global impact of COVID-19 than previously known. The study did have limits, such as underrepresentation of some countries in the data, and overrepresentation of others.

According to the authors, “This study on global seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies found that while seroprevalence has increased over time, a third of the global population tested negative for antibodies against the virus as of September 2021 estimates. It was also found that compared to seroprevalence estimates, routine testing for COVID-19 has largely underestimated the number of global infections.”

Bergeri, Whelan, Ware, Subissi and colleagues add, “As we enter the third year of the COVID-19 pandemic, implementation of a global system or network for targeted, multi-pathogen, high-quality and standardized collaborative serosurveillance is a crucial next step to monitor the COVID-19 pandemic and contribute to preparedness for other emerging respiratory pathogens.”

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PLOS Medicine
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Organisation/s: World Health Organization, Switzerland
Funder: This work was supported by WHO (WHO COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund, to IB. https:// covid19responsefund.org/en/; German Federal Ministry of Health COVID-19 Research and Development Fund, to IB; World Health Organisation funding, to RKA), the Public Health Agency of Canada (Canada’s COVID-19 Immunity Task Force through the Public Health Agency of Canada, to RKA, grant number 2021-HQ-000056 https://www.covid19immunitytaskforce.ca/), the Canadian Medical Association (Joule Innovation Fund, to RKA https://joulecma.ca/), and the Robert Koch Institute (funding to RKA https://www.rki.de). IB, LS, AnV, LA, AR, JO, TA, PW, LL, AiV, RP, MVK are employed and receive salaries from WHO (one of the funders of this study), and AN, MV, BC and HCL are WHO consultants. Authors who are members of the SeroTracker Group (led by RKA, including MW, HW, ZL, XM, TY, CC, MYL, JP, MPC, DB, ML, MS, GRD, NI, CZ, SP, HPR, TY, KCN, DK, SAA, ND, CD, NAD, EL, RKI, ASB, ELB, AS, JC) were supported through the aforementioned grants from WHO, Canada’s COVID-19 Immunity Task Force through the Public Health Agency of Canada, the Robert Koch Institute, and the Canadian Medical Association Joule Innovation Fund. WHO had a role in the study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, and the writing of the report. No other funders had any such role.
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