USA TODAY International Edition

Former monkeypox seems to have nearly disappeare­d in US

Mpox virus is still here, but vaccines did the job

- Karen Weintraub Health and patient safety coverage at USA TODAY is made possible in part by a grant from the Masimo Foundation for Ethics, Innovation and Competitio­n in Healthcare. The Masimo Foundation does not provide editorial input.

The Biden administra­tion has declared an end to the public health emergency for the disease formerly known as monkeypox, which now accounts for fewer than 10 new cases a day in the United States.

The Department of Health and Human Services announced Friday that it does not expect to need to renew the emergency declaratio­n when it ends on Jan. 31, 2023.

“But we won’t take our foot off the gas – we will continue to monitor the case trends closely and encourage all at- risk individual­s to get a free vaccine,” Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a prepared statement.

So how did an infectious disease that seemed to be raging out of control this summer become almost irrelevant three months later? It’s a combinatio­n of luck, good behavior and effective vaccines, experts say.

The World Health Organizati­on last week renamed monkeypox mpox to get rid of the stigma that associated the disease with monkeys. Monkeys don’t spread the virus, but it was first identified in them decades ago, hence the original name. The virus – similar to smallpox but much milder – had been contained to the African continent until last spring, when it suddenly appeared in Europe and then the United States, spreading largely among men who had sex with men.

The first cases were detected in the United States in mid- May. The peak was reached on Aug. 1, when 638 cases were reported. Now, the seven- day rolling average of cases is just six.

“The outbreak has been contained, but it’s not ‘ mission accomplish­ed’ because the virus is still here,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville, Tennessee.

Mpox may never leave the country entirely, said Dr. Daniel Griffin, chief of the division of infectious disease and travel medicine for Optum Health.

The high volume of cases – around 30,000 total, which was probably an undercount – “suggests that mpox is already widely distribute­d throughout the U. S.,” he said via email.

He and Schaffner worry that more cases will be missed as the virus strikes population­s that have not seen it before and physicians aren’t thinking of the disease. Plus, people with the virus remain infectious for as long as three weeks, likely too long for someone to remain isolated. With widespread transmissi­on, it also could infect animal carriers – typically rodents – and then jump back into people.

But the fact that caseloads have been brought so low suggests vaccines and treatments are effective, Griffin said.

The mpox virus typically requires significant contact to spread. Unlike COVID- 19, which can pass easily through the air, physical contact with open sores or bodily fluids is the most likely route of transmissi­on.

The outbreak was mainly among men who have sex with men, not because mpox is a “gay disease” or an African disease, Griffin said, but because “mpox is an infectious disease.” Griffin said the old name had “racial and stigmatizi­ng associatio­ns and would have liked this to have been acknowledg­ed and asked on much sooner.”

Advocates also supported the name change.

“Public health officials and authoritie­s must remove every barrier to improving understand­ing about how viruses spread and who is most affected,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, president and CEO of GLAAD, a lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer media advocacy organizati­on, in a statement.

“Decades of public health research shows stigma slows down testing, treatment, access to care, and vaccine equity, particular­ly in communitie­s of color, which are often disproport­ionately impacted by global outbreaks.”

Griffin credits behavior changes within the gay community for stopping the virus’ spread. “We were fortunate with the mpox spread that the most impacted population does not suffer from widespread embracing of the anti- science misinforma­tion and were quick to embrace vaccines, proactive about getting treated, really did reduce risky behaviors,” he said via email.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s initial messaging around mpox frightened many people who were not at any risk for the disease and did not encourage action among those at high risk, said Dr. Peter Chin- Hong, an infectious disease specialist at the University of California San Francisco School of Medicine.

Once the messaging became more specific, the gay community took action and brought infection rates down, he said. “People were so terrified of the scars and visual look of it that everybody rushed out to get ( vaccinated).”

Some people are declaring on dating apps whether they’ve been vaccinated or recovered from mpox, Chin- Hong said. If another outbreak were to occur, he said, “there’d probably be hopefully a faster calling in the troops and putting in all the interventi­ons.”

When the outbreak was at its peak, the CDC decided to conserve vaccines by delivering a smaller dose into the skin rather than underneath it.

The intraderma­l shot seems to have been effective in the short term, Schaffner said, but now he’d like to see a return to intraderma­l shots, which are probably more effective and less likely to leave a mark on the skin.

The intraderma­l shot often leaves a circular spot on the forearm, “almost like a scarlet letter,” Chin- Hong said. “You’re kind of declaring yourself as part of the community, which not everybody is necessaril­y comfortabl­e with.”

An intraderma­l shot doesn’t leave a permanent scar.

The real benefit of an intraderma­l vaccine is the ability to get more doses from the same vial, Chin- Hong said.

The outbreak peaked at a time when there were a lot of social events. With Pride season over, the virus has died down but could flare up again when social activities resume, Chin- Hong said.

Most of the outbreak was driven by cases in major cities, particular­ly New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. Chin- Hong worries that there may be undetected cases in rural and other areas where doctors are less likely to recognize the symptoms.

The open sores were both painful and visible, making them socially stigmatizi­ng, he said. “It was a visible reminder of what community you belong to.”

It also brought up memories of Kaposi sarcoma, purplish skin tumors that had been one of the most obvious symptoms of the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s and 1990s.

“To me, what was striking about mpox was the fact that it caused so much suffering,” he said.

“The most impacted population were quick to embrace vaccines, proactive about getting treated, really did reduce risky behaviors.” Dr. Daniel Griffin Optum Health

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