SARS‐CoV‐2 seroprevalence and vaccine coverage from August to November 2021: A nationally representative survey in Mexico

Author:

Basto‐Abreu Ana1,Carnalla Martha1ORCID,Torres‐Ibarra Leticia1,Sanchez‐Pájaro Andres1,Romero‐Martínez Martin2,Martínez‐Barnetche Jesus3,López‐Martínez Irma4,Aparicio‐Antonio Rodrigo4,Shamah‐Levy Teresa2,Alpuche‐Aranda Celia3,Rivera Juan A.5,Barrientos‐Gutiérrez Tonatiuh1ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Center for Population Health Research National Institute of Public Health Cuernavaca Mexico

2. Center for Research in Evaluation and Surveys National Institute of Public Health Cuernavaca Mexico

3. Center for Research on Infectious Diseases National Institute of Public Health Cuernavaca Mexico

4. Institute for Epidemiological Diagnosis and Reference Mexico City Mexico

5. National Institute of Public Health Cuernavaca Mexico

Abstract

AbstractWe aimed to estimate self‐reported vaccine coverage and SARS‐CoV‐2 anti‐N and anti‐S seroprevalence in Mexico overall and for five vaccine types. We used a nationally representative survey with 7236 dried blood spot samples for adults 18 years and older collected from August to November 2021. Anti‐N and anti‐S seroprevalence were estimated adjusting for the sensitivity and specificity of the immunoassay test. A multivariate Poisson regression model was used to estimate seroprevalence by vaccine type and by age group adjusting for confounders and test performance. Vaccination coverage was 74%, being higher in women compared to men, high socioeconomic status (SES) compared to low and middle SES, graduates compared to people with high school, and formal workers compared to other employment statuses. Anti‐N seroprevalence was 59.2%, compared to 84.1% anti‐S seroprevalence. Anti‐S seroprevalence was higher for vaccinated than unvaccinated participants. All vaccines were associated with more than 70% anti‐S seroprevalence, with the lowest being observed for CoronaVac and Ad5‐nCoV. Fully vaccinated participants over 60 years presented a lower seroprevalence (77.6%) compared to younger adults (91.1%), with larger differences for ChAdOx1 and CoronaVac vaccines. Between August and November 2021, three out of four Mexican adults had been vaccinated. Vaccination was associated with a higher positivity to anti‐S antibodies. While antibodies do not reflect immunity, our results suggest that booster doses should be offered to people over 60 years of age and to adults who received Ad5‐nCoV or CoronaVac as primary vaccination schemes.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

Reference47 articles.

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