Outbreak Alerts
Monkeypox
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Editor: Alyson Browett, MPH
Contributors: Christina Potter, MSPH, Eric Toner, MD, and Rachel Vahey, MHS
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From January 1 through July 22, 2022, 74 WHO Member States reported a total of 16,016 laboratory confirmed cases and 73 probable cases, including 5 deaths, according to a July 25 global trends report from the WHO. No deaths have been reported in countries not historically reporting monkeypox. The WHO assessed the global risk as moderate, while also assessing the risk in the Africa, Americas, Eastern Mediterranean, and South-East Asia regions as moderate. The WHO assessed the risk in the European region as high and in the Western Pacific region as low-moderate.
*The total number includes 18,861 cases in 70 countries not historically reporting monkeypox cases and 327 cases in 6 countries historically reporting monkeypox cases. The CDC map only includes cases confirmed as monkeypox virus or orthopoxvirus through laboratory testing and are year-to-date totals.
**Global.health data only include countries that have not historically reported monkeypox cases.
Some experts believe containment remains possible with widespread vaccination among the most affected communities—currently gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM)—but those vaccines remain in limited supply. Even in the US, where the government has delivered more than 300,000 doses of Bavarian Nordic’s Jynneos monkeypox vaccine, and another 786,000 doses will be made available to US states this week, demand is outstripping supply. Some US urban areas, as well as several nations, have shifted their vaccination strategies to focus on administering only the first dose of the 2-dose regimen to stretch supply. The European Union this week approved the Bavarian Nordic vaccine—known there as Imvanex—to be marketed for monkeypox. Additionally, the company is in talks to quickly ramp up its production capacity to meet global demand.
The Africa CDC welcomed the PHEIC but warned that a monkeypox outbreak on the continent has continued to grow from one country to another with little international attention since 2020. The agency noted that critical tools to address the outbreak, including diagnostics, treatments, and vaccines, have not been made available to African Union member states. Some experts maintained that while vaccination can be used to help contain the current outbreak in countries not traditionally reporting cases, policymakers must recognize the need to vaccinate populations in African countries where the disease is endemic in order to achieve long-term containment.
NEJM CASE STUDY The largest monkeypox case study to date, published July 21 in the New England Journal of Medicine, examined the characteristics of 528 monkeypox cases across 16 countries. Of the cases, 98% were gay or bisexual men with a median age of 38 years; 75% were White; and 41% had HIV infection. Of the cases included, 95% presented with a rash, 73% had anogenital lesions, 41% had mucosal lesions, 15% had anorectal pain, and 10% had only a single skin lesion in the genital area. Notably, this variety of clinical presentation differs from historical clinical characterizations and observations of monkeypox cases, leading the researchers to warn that some cases might be misdiagnosed as a sexually transmitted infection (STI), such as syphilis or herpes, leading to a delay in detection.
The NEJM study also reported that monkeypox transmission was suspected to have occurred through sexual activity in 95% of cases, leading to debate among some experts about whether the disease should be classified as an STI. However, most agree that monkeypox does not classify as an STI in the traditional sense—a disease transmitted primarily through semen or vaginal fluids—because close physical contact, with or without sexual activity, is how the virus is transmitted. Experts emphasize that monkeypox also can be spread by contact with respiratory droplets, skin lesions, or recently contaminated surfaces or objects, such as clothing or bedding.
US health officials also warned that the monkeypox virus presents a particularly profound risk to children and pregnant women, who are at a higher risk of adverse outcomes. The US CDC has identified at least 2 monkeypox cases among children and 1 case in a pregnant woman.
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