학술논문

COVID-19 cross-sectional study in Maricá, Brazil: The impact of vaccination coverage on viral incidence
Document Type
article
Author
Thiago Silva FrauchesCarlos Alberto de Senna CostaClaudia dos Santos RodriguesMarcelo Costa Velho Mendes de AzevedoMichelle de Moraes FerreiraHanna Beatriz Vieira da Silva RamosWilson Rodrigues de Souza JuniorAndréa Ribeiro CostaAdriana Cardoso CamargoAdriana Halfeld AlonsoFábio Álvaro dos SantosHércules da Silva OliveiraJanaína Guimarães CoelhoJoyce Florentina da Silva SobralLuciane Cardoso dos Santos RodriguesMarcio Martins Casaes FerreiraPatricia LaureanoRaquel Adalgiza da Paz FernandesRenata da Silva SantosRose Mary Carvalho dos SantosSanderson MilagresVanessa Cristina Conceição dos SantosJussara Teixeira SilvaTatiana Martins da SilvaMalu Gabriela Costa da RochaAndreia Edwirges de São CarlosAmorim Mourão de Araújo RamosFernanda Martins de Almeida BastosDaina Raylle FranciscoSabrina dos Santos RosaLayla Corrêa LinharesRaissa Rodrigues OrganistaLeandro BastosMaria Magdalena Kelly PintoJean Pablo Lima do NascimentoJoão Pedro Moura da SilveiraMateus Quintanilha dos SantosNathaly Santos da SilvaNayra Cristina dos Santos FerreiraRafael Brito Ramirez ReisRuan Fonseca de OliveiraValdinei de Oliveira SáThyago Ramos de Siqueira HammesJuliano de Oliveira MonteiroPedro Henrique CardosoMônica Barcellos ArrudaPatricia AlvarezRichard Araujo MaiaLiane de Jesus RibeiroOrlando Costa FerreiraAline SantosAlberto Carlos Melo de AlmeidaLauro GarciaCelso PanseraAmilcar Tanuri
Source
PLoS ONE, Vol 17, Iss 9 (2022)
Subject
Medicine
Science
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
Population surveillance in COVID-19 Pandemic is crucial to follow up the pace of disease and its related immunological status. Here we present a cross-sectional study done in Maricá, a seaside town close to the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Three rounds of study sampling, enrolling a total of 1134 subjects, were performed during May to August 2021. Here we show that the number of individuals carrying detectable IgG antibodies and the neutralizing antibody (NAb) levels were greater in vaccinated groups compared to unvaccinated ones, highlighting the importance of vaccination to attain noticeable levels of populational immunity against SARS-CoV-2. Moreover, we found a decreased incidence of COVID-19 throughout the study, clearly correlated with the level of vaccinated individuals as well as the proportion of individuals with detectable levels of IgG anti-SARS-CoV-2 and NAb. The observed drop occurred even during the introduction of the Delta variant in Maricá, what suggests that the vaccination slowed down the widespread transmission of this variant. Overall, our data clearly support the use of vaccines to drop the incidence associated to SARS-CoV-2.