SERGIO ROBERTO DE SOUZA LEAO DA COSTA CAMPOS

(Fonte: Lattes)
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Departamento de Medicina Preventiva, Faculdade de Medicina
LIM/38 - Laboratório de Epidemiologia e Imunobiologia, Hospital das Clínicas, Faculdade de Medicina

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  • conferenceObject
    A COHORT STUDY TO DETERMINE THE INCIDENCE OF ZIKA VIRUS INFECTION AMONG NEWBORNS, SANTOS, BRAZIL, 2016-2017
    (2017) LUNA, Expedito J.; ROMANO, Camila M.; ARAUJO, Evaldo S.; LEVI, Jose E.; OLIVEIRA, Olimpia N.; FERNANDES, Luis R.; FELIX, Alvina C.; SOUZA, Nathalia S.; FERNANDES, Joao H.; CAMPOS, Sergio R.; FRAGOSO, Danielli B.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.
  • article 5 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Data on dengue incidence in South-eastern Brazil, 2014-2018
    (2020) LUNA, Expedito; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa; LEVI, Jose; CAMPOS, Sergio; FELIX, Alvina; SOUZA, Nathalia; FIGUEIREDO, Walter; COSTA, Angela; CARDOSO, Maria; PANNUTI, Claudio
    Data from the routine surveillance systems have been extensively used to estimate the incidence of dengue. However, routine surveillance data frequently underestimate the diseases' incidence. Underreporting of dengue cases is related to the varying spectrum of its clinical presentation, with a large proportion of mild and asymptomatic infections, to its unspecific signs and symptoms, to the limitations of access to health care, and to the performance of the surveillance system itself [1-3]. In order to obtain accurate figures on dengue incidence, a cohort of children and adolescents was set up and followed during four years. The incidence of reported cases was used as a reference for the sample size calculation, which was stratified by age groups. A two-stage procedure was used to select the participants: census tracts were randomly selected, and within each one, a pre-determined number of children of each age group was randomly selected. The parents or legal guardians of the participating children and adolescents provided a written informed consent. In the first home visit, they responded to a questionnaire containing data on socio-demographic characteristics, housing, access to water, sewage, and garbage collection. Also, during the first visit a blood sample of the participating child/adolescent was collected for dengue baseline serology. Beginning in the week after the enrolment, the parent or legal guardian that was designated in the first visit received weekly phone calls for fever surveillance. If the child/adolescent had fever during the week, a nurse was dispatched to the family's home to collect more detailed data on the fever episode and collect a blood sample for dengue diagnosis (IgG, IgM, NS1 and PCR). If the dengue diagnosis was confirmed, a medical appointment was scheduled, and another blood sample for confirmatory tests was collected. It was also agreed that in every anniversary of their participation, they would receive another visit for a blood collection for dengue serology, regardless if they had a fever episode or a confirmed dengue diagnosis during the previous year. This article contains the description of the cohort's dataset. It is associated with the article published in Acta Tropica, under the title ""A cohort study to assess the incidence of dengue, Brazil, 2014-2018"" [4]. The associated article focused on the seroprevalence and incidence of dengue, and explored some associations between both outcomes and some explanatory variables. (C) 2020 The Authors.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 in Brazil: A systematic review and meta-analysis
    (2023) FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa Maria; TENGAN, Fatima Mitiko; CAMPOS, Sergio Roberto; LUNA, Expedito Jose
    Objectives: To summarize the data on SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence surveys conducted in Brazil before the introduction of vaccines Methods: The authors conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis on the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2 infection in Brazil. The present review followed the PRISMA guidelines. The authors searched Medline, Embase, and LILACS databases for serologic surveys conducted in the Brazilian population, in the period from 01/10/ 2019 to 07/11/2021, without language restrictions. The authors included studies that presented data concerning SARS-CoV-2 antibodies seroprevalence in Brazil and had a sample size & GE;50 individuals. Considering the expected heterogeneity between studies, all analyses were performed using the random effects model, and heterogeneity was assessed using the I2 statisticResults: Of 586 publications identified in the initial searches, 54 were included in the review and meta-analysis, which contained the results of 135 surveys, with 336,620 participants. The estimated seroprevalence was 11.0%, ranging from 1.0% to 83.0%, with a substantial heterogeneity (I2 = 99.55%). In subgroup analyses, the authors observed that the prevalence of SARS-CoV-2 antibodies was 13.0% in blood donors, 9.0% in the population-based surveys, 13% in schoolchildren, and 11.0% in healthcare workers.Conclusions: Seroprevalence increases over time. Large differences were observed among the regions of the country. It was higher in the Northern region, decreasing towards the South. The present results may contribute to the analysis of the spread of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the Brazilian population before vaccination, one of the factors that may be influencing the clinical presentation of COVID-19 cases related to the new variants, as well as the effectiveness of the vaccination program.
  • article 11 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A cohort study to assess the incidence of dengue, Brazil, 2014-2018
    (2020) LUNA, Expedito J. A.; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa M.; LEVI, Jose E.; CAMPOS, Sergio R. S. L. C.; FELIX, Alvina Clara; SOUZA, Nathalia Santiago E; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; COSTA, Angela A.; CARDOSO, Maria R. A.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.
    The present cohort study was set up with the aim of determining the incidence of dengue among children and adolescents, from 2 to 16 years of age, living in Araraquara, South-Eastern Brazil, a city classified as a mid-level endemicity location for dengue. Enrollment took place from September 2014 to March 2015. Baseline socio-demographic data were collected, and a blood sample from the participant was drawn, for dengue serology. Families were contacted weekly for fever surveillance. If the child developed fever, a nurse visited the household to collect a blood sample. PCR, NS1 and IgM were used for dengue diagnosis. Parents or legal guardians of participating children provided a written informed consent. 3,514 children and adolescents were enrolled in the cohort. Dengue baseline seroprevalence was 12.2% (95%CI: 11.1 - 13.3). The incidence density of symptomatic dengue was 8.94 per 100 person/years in the first year of follow-up, 0.58 in the second, and 0.19 in the fourth. No cases were confirmed in the third year. Incidence was associated with age, sex, baseline seroprevalence and with living in a house as opposed to an apartment. This study provides relevant information on the epidemiology of dengue in mid-level transmission settings that may be useful to policymakers in the evaluation of control strategies.
  • conferenceObject
    RE-EMERGENCE OF DENV-2 IN THE STATE OF SAO PAULO, BRAZIL
    (2019) LUNA, Expedito J.; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa M.; CAMPOS, Sergio R.; LEVI, Jose E.; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; COSTA, Angela A.; FELIX, Alvina C.; SOUZA, Nathalia S.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.
  • conferenceObject
    ESTIMATING THE UNDERREPORTING OF DENGUE CASES, ARARAQUARA, BRAZIL, 2015
    (2017) LUNA, Expedito J.; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa M.; CAMPOS, Sergio R.; LEVI, Jose E.; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; COSTA, Angela A.; FELIX, Alvina C.; SOUZA, Nathalia S.; CARDOSO, Maria R.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.
  • conferenceObject
    INAPPARENT DENGUE VIRUS INFECTION INCIDENCE, SAO PAULO, BRAZIL, 2014-2015
    (2017) LUNA, Expedito J.; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa M.; CAMPOS, Sergio R.; LEVI, Jose E.; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; COSTA, Angela A.; FELIX, Alvina C.; SOUZA, Ana C.; SOUZA, Nathalia C.; CARDOSO, Maria R.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.
  • conferenceObject
    DENGUE COHORT STUDY, ARARAQUARA, BRAZIL, 2015, BASELINE SEROPREVALENCE
    (2015) LUNA, Expedito J.; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa M.; LEVI, Jose E.; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; COSTA, Angela A.; CAMPOS, Sergio R.; FELIX, Alvina C.; SOUZA, Ana C.; SOUZA, Nathalia C.; CARDOSO, Maria R.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.
  • article 0 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    A spatial case-control study on symptomatic and inapparent primary dengue infections in an endemic city in Brazil
    (2024) FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa; CHIARAVALLOTI, Francisco; CAMPOS, Sergio; PELLINI, Alessandra Cristina Guedes; FELIX, Alvina Clara; LUNA, Expedito
    We conducted a spatial case-control study nested in a dengue incidence cohort to explore the role of the spatial and socioeconomic factors in the proportion of symptomatic (cases) and inapparent primary dengue virus infections (controls). Cohort participants were children and adolescents (2 to 16 years of age) at the beginning of the follow-up. Case definitions were, for symptomatic cases, fever plus a positive lab result for acute dengue (NS1, RT-PCR, ELISA IgM/IgG), and for inapparent infection a positive result for dengue IgG (ELISA) in subjects without symptoms and with a previously negative result at baseline. The covariates included sociodemographic factors, residential location, and socioeconomic context variables of the census tracts of residence of cases and controls. We used principal component analysis to reduce the contextual covariates, with the component values assigned to each one based on their residences. The data were modeled in a Bayesian context, considering the spatial dependence. The final sample consisted of 692 children, 274 cases and 418 controls, from the first year of follow-up (2014-2015). Being male, older age, higher educational level of the head of the family and having a larger number of rooms in the household were associated with a greater chance of presenting dengue symptomatic infection at the individual level. The contextual covariates were not associated with the outcome. Inapparent dengue infection has extensive epidemiological consequences. Relying solely on notifications of symptomatic dengue infections underestimates the number of cases, preserves a silent source of the disease, potentially spreading the virus to unaffected areas.
  • article 7 Citação(ões) na Scopus
    Comparison of clinical tools for dengue diagnosis in a pediatric population-based cohort
    (2019) DIAZ-QUIJANO, Fredi A.; FIGUEIREDO, Gerusa M.; WALDMAN, Eliseu A.; FIGUEIREDO, Walter M.; CARDOSO, Maria R. A.; CAMPOS, Sergio R. C.; COSTA, Angela A.; PANNUTI, Claudio S.; LUNA, Expedito J. A.
    Background We aimed to estimate and compare the ability of clinical tools for dengue diagnosis in a pediatric population. Methods We prospectively evaluated episodes of acute febrile syndrome identified during the follow-up of a population-based cohort of children and adolescents residing in a dengue endemic city. We estimated the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AU-ROC) for dengue diagnosis of three clinical tools: the summation of manifestations of the WHO case definition, a predefined clinical scale and a logistic regression model obtained in this study. Results We compared 219 dengue cases (confirmed by laboratory) and 286 patients with other febrile illnesses. In a multiple model, variables independently associated with dengue included the duration of fever, sleepiness and exanthema. Rhinorrhea, cough and minimal leukocyte count were inversely associated with dengue. This model reached an accuracy of 84.2% (for a cut-off of >0.5, sensitivity: 79.5%, specificity: 87.9%, positive predictive value: 83.7%, negative predictive value: 84.6%). The AU-ROC of this model (89.8%) was significantly higher than that obtained with either the predefined scale (82.1%) or the WHO definition manifestations (77%). Conclusion We validated a predefined scale and identified a multiple model suitable for the clinical diagnosis of dengue in the pediatric population.