High SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence in Karaganda, Kazakhstan before the launch of COVID-19 vaccination

Author:

Kadyrova IrinaORCID,Yegorov SergeyORCID,Negmetzhanov Baurzhan,Kolesnikova Yevgeniya,Kolesnichenko Svetlana,Korshukov Ilya,Akhmaltdinova Lyudmila,Vazenmiller Dmitriy,Stupina Yelena,Kabildina Naylya,Ashimova Assem,Raimbekova Aigul,Turmukhambetova Anar,Miller Matthew S.,Hortelano Gonzalo,Babenko Dmitriy

Abstract

COVID-19 exposure in Central Asia appears underestimated and SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence data are urgently needed to inform ongoing vaccination efforts and other strategies to mitigate the regional pandemic. Here, in a pilot serologic study we assessed the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibody-mediated immunity in a multi-ethnic cohort of public university employees in Karaganda, Kazakhstan. Asymptomatic subjects (n = 100) were recruited prior to their first COVID-19 vaccination. Questionnaires were administered to capture a range of demographic and clinical characteristics. Nasopharyngeal swabs were collected for SARS-CoV-2 RT-qPCR testing. Serological assays were performed to detect spike (S)-reactive IgG and IgA and to assess virus neutralization. Pre-pandemic samples were used to validate the assay positivity thresholds. S-IgG and -IgA seropositivity rates among SARS-CoV-2 PCR-negative participants (n = 100) were 42% (95% CI [32.2–52.3]) and 59% (95% CI [48.8–69.0]), respectively, and 64% (95% CI [53.4–73.1]) of the cohort tested positive for at least one of the antibodies. S-IgG titres correlated with virus neutralization activity, detectable in 49% of the tested subset with prior COVID-19 history. Serologically confirmed history of COVID-19 was associated with Kazakh ethnicity, but not with other ethnic minorities present in the cohort, and self-reported history of respiratory illness since March 2020. Overall, SARS-CoV-2 exposure in this cohort was ~15-fold higher compared to the reported all-time national and regional COVID-19 prevalence, consistent with recent studies of excess infection and death in Kazakhstan. Continuous serological surveillance provides important insights into COVID-19 transmission dynamics and may be used to better inform the regional public health response.

Funder

Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Faculty Development Competitive Research Grant (COVID) of Nazarbayev University

M.G. DeGroote Postdoctoral Fellowship, McMaster University

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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