Los Angeles Times

Monkeypox found in more men in Europe

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LISBON, Portugal — Portuguese health authoritie­s on Wednesday confirmed five cases of monkeypox in young men, and Britain announced two more cases, marking an unusual outbreak in Europe of a disease typically limited to Africa.

Portugal’s Directorat­eGeneral of Health said that it was also investigat­ing 15 suspected cases and that all were identified this month around the capital, Lisbon.

All the Portuguese cases involve men, most of them young, authoritie­s said. They have skin lesions and were listed as stable. Officials did not say whether the men had a history of travel to Africa or any links with recent cases in Britain or elsewhere.

In the U.S. on Wednesday, health officials in Massachuse­tts reported a case of monkeypox in a resident who had traveled to Canada, and investigat­ors are looking into whether it is connected to the European outbreaks.

British health authoritie­s said Wednesday that they had identified two new cases of monkeypox, one in London and one in southeaste­rn England. They said that neither patient had traveled to Africa and that it was possible they were infected in the United Kingdom. The cases had no known links to other previously confirmed patients, suggesting there may be multiple chains of monkeypox transmissi­on happening in the country.

Dr. Susan Hopkins, chief medical advisor of Britain’s Health Security Agency, said the latest cases, alongside the other infections reported in Europe, confirm “our initial concerns that there could be spread of monkeypox within our communitie­s.”

The agency said recent cases had been seen “predominan­tly in gay, bisexual or men who have sex with men,” although it noted it was unclear how exactly people had been infected.

Monkeypox has not previously been documented to have spread through sex, but can be transmitte­d through close contact with infected people, their clothing or bedsheets.

This week the U.K. agency reported four cases of monkeypox they said had been spread among gay and bisexual men in London. The agency said the risk to the general population “remains low.”

Health authoritie­s in Spain’s central Madrid region said late Wednesday that they were assessing 23 possible cases of monkeypox. They said that all of the suspected cases are young men and that the majority had sex with other men.

The disease belongs to a family of viruses that includes smallpox. Most people recover from monkeypox within weeks, but the World Health Organizati­on says the disease is fatal for 1 in 10 infected people. Sporadic cases of monkeypox have been seen in countries including Britain and the U.S., but nearly all have been in people who were probably infected during their travels in Africa.

Dr. Ibrahim Socé Fall, the WHO’s assistant directorge­neral for emergency response, said the spread of monkeypox in the U.K. needed to be investigat­ed to understand how the disease was being transmitte­d among men who have sex with other men.

Fall said health officials also still need a better understand­ing of how monkeypox spreads in general, even in the countries where it is endemic.

He said that although there were more than 6,000 reported cases in Congo and about 3,000 cases in Nigeria last year, there are still “so many unknowns in terms of the dynamics of transmissi­on.”

Britain previously reported three cases of monkeypox, two involving people who lived in the same household and the third someone who had traveled to Nigeria, where the disease occurs frequently in animals.

The virus has typically spread to people from infected animals such as rodents, although human-tohuman transmissi­on has been known to occur.

Some British experts said it was too soon to conclude that monkeypox had spread through sexual contact, although the outbreak there suggested that possibilit­y.

“The recent cases suggest a potentiall­y novel means of spread,” said Neil Mabbott, a disease expert at the University of Edinburgh, adding that related viruses were known to spread via sex.

Keith Neal, an infectious disease expert at the University of Nottingham, said the transmissi­on might not have occurred through sexual activity but just “the close contact associated with sexual intercours­e.”

Monkeypox typically causes fever, chills, a rash and lesions on the face or genitals resembling those caused by smallpox. A vaccine developed against smallpox has been approved for monkeypox, and several antivirals also appear to be effective.

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