サル痘の感染力の高さと病毒性の強さについて
【やはりしぬ病気だった】
スペインでのサル痘感染による死亡者2名は、感染するまで健康体で持病もなかったという情報。 https://t.co/W0r5KN4FZ8
— Angama (@Angama_Market) August 3, 2022
Unexpected info on Spain's 2 fatal #MPX cases:
Both men, aged 31 & 44.
No epi link between the cases.
Neither was immunocompromised.
Neither had underlying chronic diseases.
From a presentation by Isabel Jado, director of the National Center for Virology to a @WHO meeting.— Helen Branswell 🇺🇦 (@HelenBranswell) August 2, 2022
増加を続ける世界のサル痘感染数は週平均で1000件を上回り、過去最悪を更新したという情報。 https://t.co/vzid0zeM9S
— Angama (@Angama_Market) August 3, 2022
New world record — More than 1,000 daily #monkeypox cases (7 days average). Those who said #MPXV would fizzle out soon are plain wrong. This fall school year will need radically new / more safety mitigations.
Figure by @Antonio_Caramia pic.twitter.com/U0hRlGLLOl
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 2, 2022
2) the #monkeypox virus is very persistent in the environment. And contagiousness before overt rash symptoms makes control much harder than people thought. https://t.co/kJhUcyuu3E
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 2, 2022
3) With the environmental stability of the #monkeypox virus, that adds many more potential ways of infecting others. Look 👀 at how many tricky ways it can spread 👇 https://t.co/TdpLwug3lL
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 2, 2022
⚠️WORRISOME TRANSMISSION—We need to get sober on how & why #monkeypox is tricky to contain: thread🧵below. Many reasons outlined by DHS report:
📌MPXV is “very stable in environment”—for “days/weeks”
📌Human asymptomatic contagiousness documented *before visible rash*
🧵More— pic.twitter.com/sXS9LzJ129
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
2) 📌Furthermore, to protect against #monkeypox—doctors and nurses are recommended to wear N95 masks plus gown and gloves.
📌Decontamination protocols requires using bleach or using (harsh) quaternary ammonium reagents — which are chemicals found in pretty aggressive cleaners. pic.twitter.com/5I8s1DLUUa
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
3) Routes of infection of #MPXV: (excerpted from below)
📌Intravenous
📌Oral
📌Intranasal
📌Inhalation / aerosol in primates (cough, @CDCgov, cough)
📌Intradermal
📌Cutaneous (skin) pic.twitter.com/7RyNu1BfAh— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
4) Regarding #monkeypox transmission via cutaneous (skin) route… there is a recent story about a man in Spain who possibly contracted #MPXV via a handshake and 15 minutes using a scooter 🛴’s handlebars (& no sexual exposure). 👀https://t.co/IDlCNrEM2jhttps://t.co/88JjI6xXgl https://t.co/VBk1nMhVqn
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
5) while there are a few treatments and vaccines… the only vaccine of easy administration and low side effects is the Jynneos vaccine made by Bavarian Nordic. This one is in extremely short supply worldwide. The US can’t get more for months. https://t.co/Iw8mrBwK4k pic.twitter.com/rmuaYYiMBN
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
6) let this sink in— the US will not get more Jynneos #monkeypox vaccine for month – until October at the earliest, according to @ddiamond. We are facing a vaccine cliff of no more for months. https://t.co/xhVmU4hHP1
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
7) the Mean incubation is 7-17 days for #monkeypox, but as short as 1 day and long as 31 days. And notably, “humans can be contagious before a visible rash appears”! 👀 pic.twitter.com/worzDgGycN
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
8) Again, kids are much more vulnerable than adults for severe #monkeypox disease. While CDC says kids <8 are at high risk, the DHS report says kids <10 years old have been more frequently affected. Let’s take care to protect kids please! 🙏https://t.co/Iw8mrBwK4k pic.twitter.com/tcWGXuZ6xH
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 1, 2022
9) this will not end well. There are those who can see around corners, and those who cannot. Don’t be the latter. Acting late is not better than never. Act fast and furious — furious precautionary action is the only thing can save us from even worse outcomes. https://t.co/XcmpcLh7Al
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 2, 2022
10) 📌Asymptomatic Transmission of Monkeypox:
"The existence of asymptomatic #monkeypox infection indicates that the virus might be transmitted to close contacts in the absence of symptoms." 👀
➡️we are now in deep trouble. https://t.co/zL03pRALh8
— Eric Feigl-Ding (@DrEricDing) August 3, 2022
◆Asymptomatic monkeypox virus infections among male sexual health clinic attendees in Belgium【medRxiv 2022年7月5日】
Abstract
Background Monkeypox is transmitted by close contact with symptomatic cases, and those infected are assumed to be uniformly symptomatic. Evidence of subclinical monkeypox infection is limited to a few immunological studies which found evidence of immunity against orthopoxviruses in asymptomatic individuals who were exposed to monkeypox cases. We aimed to assess whether asymptomatic infections occurred among individuals who underwent sexually transmitted infection (STI) screening in a large Belgian STI clinic around the start of the 2022 monkeypox epidemic in Belgium.
Methods Anorectal and oropharyngeal swabs collected for gonorrhoea/chlamydia screening from May 1 until May 31, 2022 were retrospectively tested by a monkeypox-specific PCR. Cases with a positive PCR result were recalled to the clinic for case investigation, repeat testing and contact tracing.
Findings In stored samples from 224 men, we identified three cases with a positive anorectal monkeypox PCR. All three men denied having had any symptoms in the weeks before and after the sample was taken. None of them reported exposure to a diagnosed monkeypox case, nor did any of their contacts develop clinical monkeypox. Follow-up samples were taken 21 to 37 days after the initial sample, by which time the monkeypox-specific PCR was negative, likely as a consequence of spontaneous clearance of the infection.
Interpretation The existence of asymptomatic monkeypox infection indicates that the virus might be transmitted to close contacts in the absence of symptoms. Our findings suggest that identification and isolation of symptomatic individuals may not suffice to contain the outbreak.
Funding Institutional funding
Evidence before this study Similar to smallpox, monkeypox is transmitted through close contact with symptomatic cases, and 100% of those infected are assumed to develop symptoms. These features imply that an outbreak in the general population tends towards extinction with relatively minor hygienic measures, as observed in several outbreaks in endemic regions. If, however, asymptomatic transmission occurs, the outbreak becomes much more difficult to contain.
We searched PubMed and Google Scholar for evidence of asymptomatic human monkeypox, using the search terms “monkeypox” AND (“asymptomatic” OR “subclinical”), and included peer-reviewed reports published until June 17, 2022. We identified seven original reports in three different epidemiological settings which reported indirect, immunological evidence of asymptomatic monkeypox infection in a small number of people who were exposed to the virus. We did not find any study that provided direct evidence of the virus in asymptomatic individuals.
Added value of this study By retrospectively screening clinical samples collected for sexually transmitted infection screening in our centre throughout May 2022 with a monkeypox-specific PCR, we found evidence of asymptomatic monkeypox virus infection in three individuals.
Implications of all the available evidence The existence of asymptomatic monkeypox infection indicates that the virus may be transmitted in the absence of symptoms. This risk can be further quantified by studying viral dynamics in contacts of symptomatic and asymptomatic monkeypox cases. Our findings suggest that identification and isolation of symptomatic individuals may not suffice to contain the outbreak.