“…Regarding the statistical analysis, three main methods were used in the retrieved papers: the pool positivity rate (PPR, the ratio of positive pools to the total number of pools tested), the minimum infection rate (MIR, the ratio of positive pool numbers to the total number of specimens tested), and the maximum-likelihood estimate of pooled prevalence (EPP, the infection rate most likely observed given the test results and an assumed probabilistic model). According to the estimations of the study [20], EPP should be preferred over the others, given its accuracy and flexibility in accounting for spatiotemporal confounding effects. Nevertheless, the authors suggest using, when possible, both the EPP and MIR methods so that comparison between studies is feasible, given that MIR is the most widely used method for analysis of results obtained from pooled samples [20].…”