4.6 Article

Dynamics and Determinants of SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR Testing on Symptomatic Individuals Attending Healthcare Centers during 2020 in Bahia, Brazil

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14071549

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; RT-PCR; surveillance; Brazil; testing

Categories

Funding

  1. Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ) [E-26/202.248/2018(238504), E26/202.665/2019(247400)]
  2. National Institutes of Health USA [U01 AI151698]
  3. CRP-ICGEB RESEARCH GRANT 2020 [CRP/BRA20-03, CRP/20/03]
  4. Oswaldo Cruz Foundation [VPGDI-027-FIO-20-2-2-30]
  5. Brazilian Ministry of Health [SCON202100180]
  6. University of Oxford (Department of Zoology)
  7. University of Lisbon (Faculty of Sciences)
  8. Department of Health
  9. Government of the State of Bahia

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This study used RT-PCR testing data to explore regional and individual determinants of test positivity in COVID-19 patients in the state of Bahia, Brazil. The study found that age and male gender were the most significant determinants of test positivity. There were differences in positivity rates among different socio-demographic strata, with higher rates in areas with low education levels during the first wave and in areas with higher education levels during the second wave. The positivity rates generally aligned with the state-level reported cases.
RT-PCR testing data provides opportunities to explore regional and individual determinants of test positivity and surveillance infrastructure. Using Generalized Additive Models, we explored 222,515 tests of a random sample of individuals with COVID-19 compatible symptoms in the Brazilian state of Bahia during 2020. We found that age and male gender were the most significant determinants of test positivity. There was evidence of an unequal impact among socio-demographic strata, with higher positivity among those living in areas with low education levels during the first epidemic wave, followed by those living in areas with higher education levels in the second wave. Our estimated probability of testing positive after symptom onset corroborates previous reports that the probability decreases with time, more than halving by about two weeks and converging to zero by three weeks. Test positivity rates generally followed state-level reported cases, and while a single laboratory performed similar to 90% of tests covering similar to 99% of the state's area, test turn-around time generally remained below four days. This testing effort is a testimony to the Bahian surveillance capacity during public health emergencies, as previously witnessed during the recent Zika and Yellow Fever outbreaks.

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