Outbreak Alerts
Monkeypox
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Editor: Alyson Browett, MPH
Contributors: Christina Potter, MSPH, Eric Toner, MD, and Rachel Vahey, MHS, and Lane Warmbrod, MS, MPH
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The Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security is analyzing and providing updates, as needed, on the monkeypox outbreaks occurring in several non-endemic nations worldwide. If you would like to receive these updates, please sign up here.
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Recent Outbreaks Update as of June 8, 2022 at 1:00pm ET
More information on cases detected in non-endemic countries is increasingly publicly available. The CDC published a June 3 MMWR report on the US outbreak in 9 states, describing the public health response to 13 confirmed cases with a total of about 400 possible contacts (there are now 35 confirmed US cases in 14 states and Washington, DC). The European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) published several reports in its journal, Eurosurveillance, describing characteristics of monkeypox outbreaks in the UK, Italy, Australia, and Portugal. A preprint report posted by The Lancet describes the clinical and epidemiological features of patients with confirmed monkeypox infection who presented at London sexual health clinics. All 54 patients included in the report are men who have sex with men with a median age of 41. Notably, 1 in 4 patients had a concurrent sexually transmitted infection (STI) and 94% presented with lesions in the anogenital region, suggestive of transmission through close skin to skin or mucosal contact, such as sexual contact.
The CDC also has distributed at least 1,200 monkeypox vaccine doses as post-exposure prophylaxis for people who have had high-risk exposures. The US has supplies of 2 vaccines: the JYNNEOS vaccine made by Bavarian Nordic that is approved for monkeypox, and the ACAM2000 vaccine made by Emergent BioSolutions that is licensed for smallpox and effective for monkeypox. JYNNEOS is the preferred vaccine for pre-exposure prophylaxis, according to the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP). Bavarian Nordic plans to increase production of the vaccine this summer, with the capacity to produce 30 million doses per year. The CDC also is distributing doses of the antiviral tecovirimat to states. Given some of the risks to certain populations, such as pregnant women or immunocompromised people, posed by the use of the vaccines and antivirals, more clear guidance is needed for pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis and treatment of monkeypox patients. The WHO announced today it will soon be releasing guidance on clinical care, infection control and prevention, vaccination, and further guidance on community protection.
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