Abstract
Background: As the Municipality Council area in Colombo (CMC) experienced the highest number of cases until the end of January 2021, in Sri Lanka, we carried out a serosurvey prior to initiation of the vaccination program to understand the extent of the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak.Methods: SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity was determined in 2,547 individuals between the ages of 10–86 years, by the Wantai total antibody ELISA. We also compared seroprevalence using the haemagglutination test (HAT) to evaluate its usefulness in carrying out serosurveys.Results: The overall seropositivity rate was 24.46%, while seropositivity by HAT was 18.90%. Although The SARS-CoV-2 infection detection rates by PCR were highest in the population between the ages of 20–60 years of age, there was no statistically significant difference in the seropositivity rates in different age groups. For instance, although the seropositivity rate was highest in the 10–20 age group (34.03%), the PCR positivity rate was 9.80%. Differences in the PCR positivity rates and seropositivity rates were also seen in 60–70-year-olds (8.90 vs. 30.4%) and in individuals >70 years (4.10 vs. 1.20%). The seropositivity rate of the females was 29.70% (290/976), which was significantly higher (p < 0.002) than in males 21.2% (333/1,571).Conclusions: A high seroprevalence rate (24.5%) was seen in all age groups in the CMC suggesting that a high level of transmission was seen during this time. The higher PCR positivity rates between the ages of 20–60 are likely to be due to increased testing carried out in the working population. Therefore, the PCR positivity rates, appear to underestimate the true extent of the outbreak and the age groups which were infected.
Highlights
Eighteen months following the reporting of the first person infected by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, many countries are currently experiencing the third wave with higher caseloads and mortality rates
During the high transmission rate seen in the Colombo Municipal Council (CMC) from October 2020 to early January 2021, based on the testing strategy adopted in the CMC during that time, which was a test, trace, and isolate; individuals from the different districts of the CMC were subjected to random PCRs
Similar to the results obtained from the Wantai assay, the seropositivity rates for females (141/541 = 26.06%) were significantly higher (p < 0.00001) when compared to males (126/872 = 14.45%)
Summary
Eighteen months following the reporting of the first person infected by the SARS-CoV-2 virus, many countries are currently experiencing the third wave with higher caseloads and mortality rates. Sri Lanka successfully contained the epidemic until the end of September, with no locally detected cases from August to September 2020, a large outbreak emerged during early October, which rapidly spread island-wide. As the CMC is the business capital of the country, and due to extremely overcrowded living conditions, 32,346/89,817 (36.01%) locally detected cases seen by the end of March 2021, were detected within the Colombo district [3]. As the Municipality Council area in Colombo (CMC) experienced the highest number of cases until the end of January 2021, in Sri Lanka, we carried out a serosurvey prior to initiation of the vaccination program to understand the extent of the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak
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