The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New form of mpox that may spread more easily found in Congo

Outbreak has sickened more than 4,500, killed hundreds since January.

- By Maria Cheng and Christina Malkia

KINSHASA, CONGO — Congo is struggling to contain its biggest mpox outbreak, and scientists say a new form of the disease detected in a mining town might more easily spread among people.

Since January, Congo has reported more than 4,500 suspected mpox cases and nearly 300 deaths, numbers that have roughly tripled from the same period last year, according to the World Health Organizati­on. Congo recently declared the outbreak across the country a health emergency.

An analysis of patients hospitaliz­ed between October and January in Kamituga, eastern Congo, suggests recent genetic mutations in mpox are the result of its continued transmissi­on in humans; it’s happening in a town where people have little contact with the wild animals thought to naturally carry the disease.

“We’re in a new phase of mpox,” said Dr. Placide Mbala-Kingebeni, the lead researcher of the study, who said it will soon be submitted to a journal for publicatio­n. Mbala-Kingebeni heads a lab at Congo’s National Institute of Biomedical Research, which studies the genetics of diseases.

The lesions reported by most patients are milder and on the genitals, Mbala-Kingebeni said, making the disease trickier to diagnose. In previous outbreaks in Africa, lesions were mostly seen on the chest, hands and feet. He also said that the new form seems to have a lower death rate.

In a report on the global mpox situation this week, WHO said the new version of the disease might require a new testing strategy to pick up the mutations.

With experts pointing out that fewer than half of people in Congo with mpox are tested, Mbala-Kingebeni said: “The risk is that unless patients themselves come forward, we will have a silent transmissi­on of the disease and nobody will know.”

Mbala-Kingebeni said most people were infected via sex, with about a third of mpox cases found in sex workers. It was not until the 2022 global emergency of mpox that scientists establishe­d the disease was spread via sex, with most cases in gay or bisexual men. In November, WHO confirmed sexual transmissi­on of mpox in Congo for the first time.

There are two kinds, or clades, of mpox, which is related to smallpox and endemic to central and west Africa. Clade 1 is more severe and can kill up to 10% of people infected. Clade 2 triggered the 2022 outbreak; more than 99% of people infected survived.

Mbala-Kingebeni and colleagues said they have identified a new form of clade 1 that may be responsibl­e for more than 240 cases and at least three deaths in Kamituga, a region with a significan­t transient population traveling elsewhere in Africa and beyond.

Dr. Boghuma Titanji, an infectious diseases expert at Emory University who is not connected to the research, said the new mutations are concerning.

“This suggests the virus is adapting to spread efficientl­y in humans and could cause some pretty consequent­ial outbreaks,” she said.

Although the mpox epidemics in the West were contained with the help of vaccines and treatments, barely any have been available in Congo. Congo’s minister of health has authorized the use of vaccines in high-risk provinces, said Cris Kacita Osako, coordinato­r of Congo’s Monkeypox Response Committee. He said officials are in talks with donor countries like Japan to help buy the shots.

“Once a sufficient quantity of vaccines is available … vaccinatio­n will be implemente­d as part of the response,” Kacita Osako said.

Dr. Dimie Ogoina, an mpox expert at Niger Delta University, said the new research is an unsettling reminder of an earlier — but different — outbreak.

“The notable spread among sex workers is reminiscen­t of the early stages of HIV,” he said, explaining that prejudices attached to treating sexually transmitte­d infections and the reluctance of people with mpox to come forward were worrying.

WHO’s emergencie­s chief, Dr. Michael Ryan, said last week that despite the ongoing spread of mpox in Africa and elsewhere, “there has not been a single donor dollar invested.”

 ?? AP 2022 ?? Congo’s health minister has authorized the use of mpox vaccines in high-risk provinces. An analysis of patients in Kamituga, eastern Congo, suggests genetic mutations, and not contact with wild animals, are responsibl­e for continued transmissi­on in humans.
AP 2022 Congo’s health minister has authorized the use of mpox vaccines in high-risk provinces. An analysis of patients in Kamituga, eastern Congo, suggests genetic mutations, and not contact with wild animals, are responsibl­e for continued transmissi­on in humans.

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