BMJ Open (Dec 2022)

What is the prevalence of COVID-19 detection by PCR among deceased individuals in Lusaka, Zambia? A postmortem surveillance study

  • Lawrence Mwananyanda,
  • William B MacLeod,
  • Donald M Thea,
  • Rachel C Pieciak,
  • Christopher J Gill,
  • Geoffrey Kwenda,
  • Zachariah Mupila,
  • Rotem Lapidot,
  • Leah Forman,
  • Lauren Etter,
  • Ruth Nakazwe,
  • Daniel Bridges,
  • Chilufya Chikoti,
  • Sarah Chirwa,
  • Charles Chimoga,
  • Ben Katowa,
  • James Lungu,
  • Japhet Matoba,
  • Gift Mwinga,
  • Benjamin Mubemba,
  • Walter Muleya,
  • Mulenga Mwenda,
  • Benard Ngoma,
  • Diana Nzara,
  • Natalie Pawlak,
  • Lillian Pemba,
  • Ngonda Saasa,
  • Edgar Simulundu,
  • Baron Yankonde

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066763
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12

Abstract

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Objectives To determine the prevalence of COVID-19 postmortem setting in Lusaka, Zambia.Design A systematic, postmortem prevalence study.Setting A busy, inner-city morgue in Lusaka.Participants We sampled a random subset of all decedents who transited the University Teaching Hospital morgue. We sampled the posterior nasopharynx of decedents using quantitative PCR. Prevalence was weighted to account for age-specific enrolment strategies.Interventions Not applicable—this was an observational study.Primary outcomes Prevalence of COVID-19 detections by PCR. Results were stratified by setting (facility vs community deaths), age, demographics and geography and time.Secondary outcomes Shifts in viral variants; causal inferences based on cycle threshold values and other features; antemortem testing rates.Results From 1118 decedents enrolled between January and June 2021, COVID-19 was detected among 32.0% (358/1116). Roughly four COVID-19+ community deaths occurred for every facility death. Antemortem testing occurred for 52.6% (302/574) of facility deaths but only 1.8% (10/544) of community deaths and overall, only ~10% of COVID-19+ deaths were identified in life. During peak transmission periods, COVID-19 was detected in ~90% of all deaths. We observed three waves of transmission that peaked in July 2020, January 2021 and ~June 2021: the AE.1 lineage and the Beta and Delta variants, respectively. PCR signals were strongest among those whose deaths were deemed ‘probably due to COVID-19’, and weakest among children, with an age-dependent increase in PCR signal intensity.Conclusions COVID-19 was common among deceased individuals in Lusaka. Antemortem testing was rarely done, and almost never for community deaths. Suspicion that COVID-19 was the cause of deaths was highest for those with a respiratory syndrome and lowest for individuals <19 years.