By John
Muchangi, NAIROBI Kenya
The number of Kenyans possibly infected with Covid-19 has been scaled down to at least 1.6 million after further analysis of antibody tests.
Exposure in the entire population
could be higher because the 1.6 million are only those aged 15 to 64 years as
at June 16.
The analysis, done by scientists
from the Kenya Medical Research Institute-Wellcome Trust in Kilifi, has been
endorsed by the Ministry of Health and submitted for publication to a medical
journal.
Health Chief Administrative
Secretary Dr Rashid Aman told the Star this is still preliminary data.
"The seroprevalence research
is ongoing among several other cohorts of the population to enrich the
preliminary data and will be submitted when ready," he said.
The initial analysis released
early last month had showed 2.6 million Kenyans were exposed to the virus,
based on antibody tests on 2,535 samples of donated blood.
This time the researchers
analysed 3,098 samples of blood donated by Kenyans aged 15 to 64 years between
April 30 and June 16.
Before the blood draw, donors
gave individual consent for the use of their samples for Covid-19 research.
"We estimate that one in 20
adults in Kenya had SARS-CoV-2 antibodies during the study period," the
researchers say in the final analysis for this age group.
Health CASs Dr Aman and Dr Mercy
Mwangangi and acting Director General for Health Patrick Amoth have co-authored
the study.
Others are immunologist
Sophie Uyoga, Kemri-Wellcome Trust Nairobi director Edwine Barasa, Kenya
National Blood Transfusion Services boss Charles Rombo, and Kemri's Dr Isabella
Oyier and George Warimwe.
They estimated the country's
population at 53 million, 57 per cent of which is aged 15-64 years.
Tests on the samples showed 5.6
per cent (174/3,098) had Covid-19 antibodies.
Because blood donors are not
representative of the Kenyan population, the researchers adjusted for the
bias by standardisation against the age, sex, and regional distribution of
the Kenyan population.
The adjusted national prevalence
was fixed at 5.2 per cent.
"A seroprevalence of 5.2 per
cent would therefore suggest approximately 1.6 million infections among
15-64-year-olds in Kenya," the paper says.
When the last blood samples were
collected, Kenya had only 2,093 Covid-19 cases and 71 deaths reported through
the national screening system.
By Sunday this week, reported
cases had risen to 22,053 and 369 deaths.
Covid-19 antibodies appear within
one to three weeks after symptom onset.
They are weaker in people
with fewer symptoms and those with no symptoms. Ninety per cent
of Kenya's Covid-19 patients at that time were asymptomatic.
Kemri says their Elisa test for
the antibodies had a sensitivity threshold of 83 per cent and a high
specificity of 99 per cent.
The analysis still shows the
infections highest in Mombasa (9.3 per cent), Nairobi (8.5 per cent)
and Kisumu (6.59.3 per cent).
Scientists say there is no
evidence recovered patients can be reinfected with SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that
causes Covid-19) and anecdotal reports of reinfection may be cases of drawn-out
illness.
On July 15, DG Amoth confirmed
Kenya had not recorded any case of reinfection.
"We have not recorded
reinfection yet, however evidence from other contexts show that there is a
possibility of reinfection. We therefore urge all those who have recovered to
continue taking precaution," he said.
Anti-SARS-Cov-2 antibody surveys can be used to monitor the spread of the pandemic across the population and to inform mathematical models that predict the course of the epidemic. – The Star
No comments:
Post a Comment