Prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in Spain (ENE-COVID): a nationwide, population-based seroepidemiological study

Montserrat Hernández Pascual , Roberto Alonso , Paloma Merino Amador , Montserrat Hernández Pascual , Roberto Alonso , Paloma Merino Amador , Natalia Cabrera-Castro , Aurora Tomás Lizcano , Cristóbal Ramírez Almagro , M. Segovia Hernández , Marina Pollán , Beatriz Pérez‐Gómez , Roberto Pastor‐Barriuso , Jesús Oteo , Miguel A. Hernán , Mayte Pérez‐Olmeda , Jose L Sanmartín , Aurora Fernández-García , Israel Cruz , Nerea Fernández de Larrea , Marta Molina , Francisco Rodríguez-Cabrera , Mariano Martín , Paloma Merino Amador , José León Paniagua , Juan F Muñoz-Montalvo , Faustino Blanco , Raquel Yotti , Faustino Blanco , Rodrigo Gutiérrez Fernández , Mariano Martín , Saturnino Mezcua Navarro , Marta Molina , Juan F Muñoz-Montalvo , Matías Salinero Hernández , Jose L Sanmartín , Manuel Cuenca‐Estrella , Raquel Yotti , José León Paniagua , Nerea Fernández de Larrea , José María Navarro‐Marí , Roberto Pastor‐Barriuso , Beatriz Pérez‐Gómez , Marina Pollán , Ana Avellón , Giovanni Fedele , Aurora Fernández-García , Jesús Oteo , Mayte Pérez‐Olmeda , Israel Cruz , Elena Fernández‐Martínez , Francisco Rodríguez-Cabrera , Miguel A. Hernán , Susana Padrones Fernández , José Manuel Rumbao Aguirre , José María Navarro‐Marí , Begoña Palop Borrás , Ana Belén Jiménez , Manuel Rodríguez‐Iglesias , Ana María Calvo Gascón , María Luz Lou Alcaine , Ignacio Donate Suárez , O. Alvarez , Mercedes Rodríguez Pérez , Margarita Cases Sanchís , Carlos Javier Villafáfila-Gomila , Lluís Carbó Saladrigas , Adoración Hurtado Fernández , Antonio Oliver , Elías Castro Feliciano , María Noemí González Quintana , José María Barrasa Fernández , María Araceli Hernández Betancor , Melisa Hernández Febles , Leopoldo Martín Martín , Luis-Mariano López López , Teresa Ugarte Miota , Inés De Benito Población , María Sagrario Celada Pérez , María Natalia Vallés Fernández , Tomás Maté , M. Arranz , Marta Domínguez-Gil González , Isabel Fernández-Natal , Gregoria Megías Lobón , Juan Luis Muñoz Bellido , Pilar Ciruela , Ariadna Mas i Casals , María Doladé , María Ángeles Marcos , Dúnia Pérez del Campo , Antonio Félix de Castro , Ramón Limón Ramírez , Maria Francisca Elías Retamosa , Manuela Rubio González , María Sinda Blanco Lobeiras , Alberto Fuentes Losada , Antonio Aguilera , Germán Bou , Yolanda Caro , Noemí Marauri , Luis Miguel Soria Blanco , Isabel del Cura-González
2020 The Lancet 1,872 citations

Abstract

Spain is one of the European countries most affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Serological surveys are a valuable tool to assess the extent of the epidemic, given the existence of asymptomatic cases and little access to diagnostic tests. This nationwide population-based study aims to estimate the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infection in Spain at national and regional level. 35 883 households were selected from municipal rolls using two-stage random sampling stratified by province and municipality size, with all residents invited to participate. From April 27 to May 11, 2020, 61 075 participants (75·1% of all contacted individuals within selected households) answered a questionnaire on history of symptoms compatible with COVID-19 and risk factors, received a point-of-care antibody test, and, if agreed, donated a blood sample for additional testing with a chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay. Prevalences of IgG antibodies were adjusted using sampling weights and post-stratification to allow for differences in non-response rates based on age group, sex, and census-tract income. Using results for both tests, we calculated a seroprevalence range maximising either specificity (positive for both tests) or sensitivity (positive for either test). Seroprevalence was 5·0% (95% CI 4·7-5·4) by the point-of-care test and 4·6% (4·3-5·0) by immunoassay, with a specificity-sensitivity range of 3·7% (3·3-4·0; both tests positive) to 6·2% (5·8-6·6; either test positive), with no differences by sex and lower seroprevalence in children younger than 10 years (<3·1% by the point-of-care test). There was substantial geographical variability, with higher prevalence around Madrid (>10%) and lower in coastal areas (<3%). Seroprevalence among 195 participants with positive PCR more than 14 days before the study visit ranged from 87·6% (81·1-92·1; both tests positive) to 91·8% (86·3-95·3; either test positive). In 7273 individuals with anosmia or at least three symptoms, seroprevalence ranged from 15·3% (13·8-16·8) to 19·3% (17·7-21·0). Around a third of seropositive participants were asymptomatic, ranging from 21·9% (19·1-24·9) to 35·8% (33·1-38·5). Only 19·5% (16·3-23·2) of symptomatic participants who were seropositive by both the point-of-care test and immunoassay reported a previous PCR test. The majority of the Spanish population is seronegative to SARS-CoV-2 infection, even in hotspot areas. Most PCR-confirmed cases have detectable antibodies, but a substantial proportion of people with symptoms compatible with COVID-19 did not have a PCR test and at least a third of infections determined by serology were asymptomatic. These results emphasise the need for maintaining public health measures to avoid a new epidemic wave. Spanish Ministry of Health, Institute of Health Carlos III, and Spanish National Health System.

Keywords

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)2019-20 coronavirus outbreakMedicineVirologyBetacoronavirusPandemicPopulationCoronavirus InfectionsEnvironmental healthInfectious disease (medical specialty)DiseaseOutbreakInternal medicine

MeSH Terms

AdolescentAdultAgedAntibodiesViralBetacoronavirusCOVID-19ChildChildPreschoolCoronavirus InfectionsFemaleHumansImmunoassayImmunoglobulin GImmunoglobulin MInfantInfantNewbornMaleMiddle AgedPandemicsPneumoniaViralPoint-of-Care TestingPrevalenceRisk FactorsSARS-CoV-2Seroepidemiologic StudiesSpainYoung Adult

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
396
Issue
10250
Pages
535-544
Citations
1872
Access
Closed

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98
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Cite This

Montserrat Hernández Pascual, Roberto Alonso, Paloma Merino Amador et al. (2020). Prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in Spain (ENE-COVID): a nationwide, population-based seroepidemiological study. The Lancet , 396 (10250) , 535-544. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(20)31483-5

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0140-6736(20)31483-5
PMID
32645347
PMCID
PMC7336131

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%