- Ng, Dianna L;
- Goldgof, Gregory M;
- Shy, Brian R;
- Levine, Andrew G;
- Balcerek, Joanna;
- Bapat, Sagar P;
- Prostko, John;
- Rodgers, Mary;
- Coller, Kelly;
- Pearce, Sandra;
- Franz, Sergej;
- Du, Li;
- Stone, Mars;
- Pillai, Satish K;
- Sotomayor-Gonzalez, Alicia;
- Servellita, Venice;
- Martin, Claudia Sanchez San;
- Granados, Andrea;
- Glasner, Dustin R;
- Han, Lucy M;
- Truong, Kent;
- Akagi, Naomi;
- Nguyen, David N;
- Neumann, Neil M;
- Qazi, Daniel;
- Hsu, Elaine;
- Gu, Wei;
- Santos, Yale A;
- Custer, Brian;
- Green, Valerie;
- Williamson, Phillip;
- Hills, Nancy K;
- Lu, Chuanyi M;
- Whitman, Jeffrey D;
- Stramer, Susan L;
- Wang, Candace;
- Reyes, Kevin;
- Hakim, Jill MC;
- Sujishi, Kirk;
- Alazzeh, Fariba;
- Pham, Lori;
- Thornborrow, Edward;
- Oon, Ching-Ying;
- Miller, Steve;
- Kurtz, Theodore;
- Simmons, Graham;
- Hackett, John;
- Busch, Michael P;
- Chiu, Charles Y
Given the limited availability of serological testing to date, the seroprevalence of SARS-CoV-2-specific antibodies in different populations has remained unclear. Here, we report very low SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence in two San Francisco Bay Area populations. Seroreactivity was 0.26% in 387 hospitalized patients admitted for non-respiratory indications and 0.1% in 1,000 blood donors in early April 2020. We additionally describe the longitudinal dynamics of immunoglobulin-G (IgG), immunoglobulin-M (IgM), and in vitro neutralizing antibody titers in COVID-19 patients. The median time to seroconversion ranged from 10.3-11.0 days for these 3 assays. Neutralizing antibodies rose in tandem with immunoglobulin titers following symptom onset, and positive percent agreement between detection of IgG and neutralizing titers was >93%. These findings emphasize the importance of using highly accurate tests for surveillance studies in low-prevalence populations, and provide evidence that seroreactivity using SARS-CoV-2 anti-nucleocapsid protein IgG and anti-spike IgM assays are generally predictive of in vitro neutralizing capacity.