Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease (Nov 2023)

Using Regional Sero-Epidemiology SARS-CoV-2 Anti-S Antibodies in the Dominican Republic to Inform Targeted Public Health Response

  • Beatris Mario Martin,
  • Angela Cadavid Restrepo,
  • Helen J. Mayfield,
  • Cecilia Then Paulino,
  • Micheal De St Aubin,
  • William Duke,
  • Petr Jarolim,
  • Emily Zielinski Gutiérrez,
  • Ronald Skewes Ramm,
  • Devan Dumas,
  • Salome Garnier,
  • Marie Caroline Etienne,
  • Farah Peña,
  • Gabriela Abdalla,
  • Beatriz Lopez,
  • Lucia de la Cruz,
  • Bernarda Henríquez,
  • Margaret Baldwin,
  • Benn Sartorius,
  • Adam Kucharski,
  • Eric James Nilles,
  • Colleen L. Lau

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed8110493
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 493

Abstract

Read online

Incidence of COVID-19 has been associated with sociodemographic factors. We investigated variations in SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence at sub-national levels in the Dominican Republic and assessed potential factors influencing variation in regional-level seroprevalence. Data were collected in a three-stage cross-sectional national serosurvey from June to October 2021. Seroprevalence of antibodies against the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein (anti-S) was estimated and adjusted for selection probability, age, and sex. Multilevel logistic regression was used to estimate the effect of covariates on seropositivity for anti-S and correlates of 80% protection (PT80) against symptomatic infection for the ancestral and Delta strains. A total of 6683 participants from 134 clusters in all 10 regions were enrolled. Anti-S, PT80 for the ancestral and Delta strains odds ratio varied across regions, Enriquillo presented significant higher odds for all outcomes compared with Yuma. Compared to being unvaccinated, receiving ≥2 doses of COVID-19 vaccine was associated with a significantly higher odds of anti-S positivity (OR 85.94, [10.95–674.33]) and PT80 for the ancestral (OR 4.78, [2.15–10.62]) and Delta strains (OR 3.08, [1.57–9.65]) nationally and also for each region. Our results can help inform regional-level public health response, such as strategies to increase vaccination coverage in areas with low population immunity against currently circulating strains.

Keywords