Population-based prevalence surveys during the COVID-19 pandemic: a systematic review

Autor: Carem Luana Machado Lessa, Claudia Elizabeth Thompson, Andressa Barreto Glaeser, Amanda de Menezes Mayer, Álvaro Vigo, Janini Cristina Paiz, Paulo Ricardo Gazzola Zen, Liane Nanci Rotta, Gabriel Dickin Caldana, Andressa Schneiders Santos, Julia Gonçalves Küchle, Vinícius Bonetti Franceschi, Ana Trindade Winck
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
DOI: 10.1101/2020.10.20.20216259
Popis: Population-based prevalence surveys of COVID-19 contribute to establish the burden and epidemiology of infection, the role of asymptomatic and mild infections in transmission, and allow more precise decisions about reopen policies. We performed a systematic review to evaluate qualitative aspects of these studies, their reliability, and biases. The available data described 37 surveys from 19 countries, mostly from Europe and America and using antibody testing. They reached highly heterogeneous sample sizes and prevalence estimates. Disproportional prevalence was observed in minority communities. Important risk of bias was detected in four domains: sample size, data analysis with sufficient coverage, measurements in standard way, and response rate. The correspondence analysis showed few consistent patterns for high risk of bias. Intermediate risk of bias was related to American and European studies, blood samples and prevalence >1%. Low risk of bias was related to Asian studies, RT-PCR tests and prevalence One sentence summaryPopulation-based prevalence surveys of COVID-19 until September 2020 were mostly conducted in Europe and Americas, used antibody testing, and had important risks of bias.
Databáze: OpenAIRE