Bagala Irene, Namuganga Jane Frances, Nayebare Patience, Cuu Gloria, Katairo Thomas, Nabende Isaiah, Gonahasa Samuel, Nassali Martha, Tukwasibwe Stephen, Dorsey Grant, Nankabirwa Joaniter I, Bakeera-Kitaka Sabrina, Kiguli Sarah, Greenhouse Bryan, Ssewanyana Isaac, Kamya Moses R, Briggs Jessica
Makerere University College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
Infectious Diseases Research Collaboration, Kampala, Uganda.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 23;19(12):e0312554. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312554. eCollection 2024.
Understanding COVID-19's impact on children is vital for public health policy, yet age-specific data is scarce, especially in Uganda. This study examines SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence and risk factors among Ugandan children at two timepoints, along with COVID-19-related knowledge and practices in households, including adult vaccination status.
Baseline surveys were conducted in 12 communities from April to May 2021 (post-Alpha wave) and follow-up surveys in 32 communities from November 2021 to March 2022 (Omicron wave). Household questionnaires and blood samples were collected to test for malaria by microscopy and for SARS-CoV-2 using a Luminex assay. Seroprevalence was estimated at both the survey and community level. Mixed-effects logistic regression models assessed the association between individual and household factors and SARS-CoV-2 seropositivity in children, adjusting for household clustering.
More households reported disruptions in daily life at baseline compared to follow-up, though economic impacts lingered. By the follow-up survey, 52.7% of adults had received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose. Overall seroprevalence in children was higher at follow-up compared to baseline (71.6% versus 19.2%, p < 0.001). Seroprevalence in children ranged across communities from 6-37% at baseline and 50-90% at follow-up. At baseline, children from the poorest households were more likely to be infected. Increasing age remained the only consistent risk factor for SARS-CoV-2 seroconversion at both timepoints.
Results indicate that a larger number of children were infected during the Delta and Omicron waves of COVID-19 compared to the Alpha wave. This study is the largest seroprevalence survey in children in Uganda, providing evidence that most children were infected with SARS-CoV-2 before the vaccine was widely available to pediatric populations. Pediatric infections were vastly underreported by case counts, highlighting the importance of seroprevalence surveys in assessing disease burden when testing and reporting rates are limited and many cases are mild or asymptomatic.
了解新冠病毒对儿童的影响对于公共卫生政策至关重要,但特定年龄段的数据稀缺,尤其是在乌干达。本研究调查了两个时间点乌干达儿童中新冠病毒的血清流行率及风险因素,以及家庭中与新冠病毒相关的知识和做法,包括成人疫苗接种状况。
于2021年4月至5月(阿尔法毒株流行期之后)在12个社区进行基线调查,并于2021年11月至2022年3月(奥密克戎毒株流行期)在32个社区进行随访调查。收集家庭问卷和血样,通过显微镜检查检测疟疾,并使用Luminex检测法检测新冠病毒。在调查和社区层面估计血清流行率。混合效应逻辑回归模型评估个体和家庭因素与儿童新冠病毒血清阳性之间的关联,并对家庭聚类进行校正。
与随访时相比,更多家庭在基线时报告日常生活受到干扰,尽管经济影响仍在持续。到随访调查时,52.7%的成年人至少接种了一剂新冠疫苗。与基线相比,儿童的总体血清流行率在随访时更高(71.6%对19.2%,p<0.001)。儿童血清流行率在各社区之间有所不同,基线时为6%-37%,随访时为50%-90%。在基线时,最贫困家庭的儿童感染可能性更高。在两个时间点,年龄增长仍然是新冠病毒血清转换的唯一一致风险因素。
结果表明,与阿尔法毒株流行期相比,在新冠病毒的德尔塔毒株和奥密克戎毒株流行期有更多儿童感染。本研究是乌干达规模最大的儿童血清流行率调查,提供了证据表明在疫苗广泛提供给儿童群体之前,大多数儿童已感染新冠病毒。病例数严重低估了儿科感染情况,凸显了血清流行率调查在检测和报告率有限且许多病例为轻症或无症状时评估疾病负担的重要性。