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BackgroundSARS-CoV-2 seroepidemiological studies, which have been used to describe population-level immunity, are limited in the Philippines, despite the protracted course of the epidemic in the country. We follow-up on our previous work and aimed to estimate SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence and infection rate among outpatient clinic attendees in Metro Manila, a year after the implementation of the national COVID-19 vaccination program.MethodsWe conducted four repeated cross-sectional surveys at the outpatient department of San Lazaro Hospital between March 2022 and January 2023. We performed χ2 test and analysis of variance to assess the differences in characteristics across different data collection periods.ResultsA total of 765 participants were enrolled, ranging from 170 to 200 per period. Participant demographic, socioeconomic, and medical history were comparable across all data collection periods. Between March and October 2022, the proportion of participants who received a vaccine or booster dose significantly increased, from 77.9% to 90%. Seroprevalence across all data collection periods was consistently high, ranging from 97.8% to 99.5%. However, the geometric mean concentration of antibodies was highest in the data collection period following the Omicron-dominant wave. Infection rates were comparably low (ConclusionPopulation-level seroprevalence among clinic attendees in Manila was consistently high a year after implementation of the national COVID-19 vaccination program, but analyses of antibody concentrations showed potential waning within a 3-month period.

Original publication

DOI

10.1186/s41182-025-00767-9

Type

Journal article

Journal

Tropical medicine and health

Publication Date

06/2025

Volume

53

Addresses

San Lazaro Hospital - Nagasaki University Collaborative Research Office, San Lazaro Hospital, Quiricada Street, Sta. Cruz, 1003, Manila, Philippines.