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Clinical and Epidemiological Findings from Enhanced Monkeypox Surveillance in Tshuapa Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo During 2011–2015

Erin Whitehouse, Jesse Bonwitt, Christine M. Hughes, Robert Shongo Lushima, Toutou Likafi, Béatrice Nguete, Joelle Kabamba, Benjamin Monroe, Jeffrey B. Doty, Yoshinori Nakazawa, Inger K. Damon, Jean Malekani, Whitni Davidson, Kimberly Wilkins, Li Yu, Kay Radford, D. Scott Schmid, Elisabeth Pukuta, Elisabeth Muyamuna, Stomy Karhemere, Jean‐Jacques Muyembe Tamfum, Emile Okitolonda, Andrea M. McCollum, Mary G. Reynolds

2021The Journal of Infectious Diseases144 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Monkeypox is a poorly described emerging zoonosis endemic to Central and Western Africa. METHODS: Using surveillance data from Tshuapa Province, Democratic Republic of the Congo during 2011-2015, we evaluated differences in incidence, exposures, and clinical presentation of polymerase chain reaction-confirmed cases by sex and age. RESULTS: We report 1057 confirmed cases. The average annual incidence was 14.1 per 100 000 (95% confidence interval, 13.3-15.0). The incidence was higher in male patients (incidence rate ratio comparing males to females, 1.21; 95% confidence interval, 1.07-1.37), except among those 20-29 years old (0.70; .51-.95). Females aged 20-29 years also reported a high frequency of exposures (26.2%) to people with monkeypox-like symptoms.The highest incidence was among 10-19-year-old males, the cohort reporting the highest proportion of animal exposures (37.5%). The incidence was lower among those presumed to have received smallpox vaccination than among those presumed unvaccinated. No differences were observed by age group in lesion count or lesion severity score. CONCLUSIONS: Monkeypox incidence was twice that reported during 1980-1985, an increase possibly linked to declining immunity provided by smallpox vaccination. The high proportion of cases attributed to human exposures suggests changing exposure patterns. Cases were distributed across age and sex, suggesting frequent exposures that follow sociocultural norms.

Topics & Concepts

MonkeypoxIncidence (geometry)MedicineEpidemiologyConfidence intervalDemographyVaccinationHerd immunityImmunologyInternal medicineBiologyVacciniaPhysicsSociologyRecombinant DNABiochemistryGeneOpticsPoxvirus research and outbreaksBacillus and Francisella bacterial researchViral Infections and Outbreaks Research
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