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Fears new ‘most dangerous’ mpox strain could cross borders
FILE - This image provided by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) shows a colorised transmission electron micrograph of monkeypox particles (red) found within an infected cell (blue), cultured in the laboratory that was captured and color-enhanced at the NIAID Integrated Research Facility (IRF) in Fort Detrick, Md. The World Health Organization has renamed monkeypox as mpox, citing concerns the original name of the decades-old animal disease could be construed as discriminatory and racist. (NIAID via AP, File)
International News, Latest News
June 26, 2024

Fears new ‘most dangerous’ mpox strain could cross borders

PARIS, France (AFP)— A new deadlier strain of mpox that transmits more easily between people is killing children and causing miscarriages in the Democratic Republic of Congo and may have already spread to neighbouring countries, researchers have warned.

All countries should be preparing for “this new strain before it spreads to other places, before it is too late,” Jean Claude Udahemuka, a researcher at the University of Rwanda studying the outbreak, told AFP.

A global outbreak of a new strain of Mpox, previously known as monkeypox, in 2022 spread to more than 110 countries, mostly affecting gay and bisexual men. That was the clade II strain.

But there have been regular outbreaks of the clade I strain — which is 10 times deadlier — in Africa since it was first detected in DR Congo in 1970.

While the global outbreak was largely sexually transmitted, people in Africa normally caught clade I from infected animals, such as when eating bushmeat.

But “it was obvious something was different” about an mpox outbreak detected among sex workers in the remote mining Congolese town of Kamituga in September last year, Udahemuka told an online press conference.

Unlike previous outbreaks in the central African country, the virus was being transmitted via sex between heterosexuals.

Testing revealed it was a mutated variant of the original strain called clade Ib.

It is “undoubtedly the most dangerous strain so far,” Udahemuka said.

More than 1,000 cases of clade Ib have been reported in South Kivu province since, said Leandre Murhula Masirika, who has led local research into the outbreak.

There are more than 20 new cases every week in Kamituga alone — and the number is rising, he warned.

Five per cent of adults and 10 percent of children who get the strain die, researchers said.

It gives sufferers “horrendous whole body rashes,” unlike clade II, which caused lesions normally more limited to the genital area, said Trudie Lang, a global health researcher at Oxford University.

The clade Ib strain has also been spreading through non-sexual contact between people — including among families or children playing together at school — marking a major change from previous outbreaks, the researchers said.

There has been a “high amount” of transmission between mothers or carers and children, Lang said.

The strain has also caused numerous miscarriages, and researchers are studying its long-term effect on fertility.

These significant differences from previous mpox strains are “incredibly worrying,” Lang said.

And the extreme cases turning up at hospital are likely “the tip of the iceberg,” because many patients likely have less severe symptoms, she added.

There remain many “important unknowns” about the new strain, Lang cautioned, comparing this stage of investigation to the early days of COVID-19.

Out of 384 people who died from all mpox strains in DR Congo this year, more than 60 per cent were children, according to the World Health Organization.

So far, clade Ib has spread to the Congolese cities of Bukavu, Uvira and Kamanyola — and this week was declared in North Kivu province’s capital, Goma, the researchers said.

These cities are near DR Congo’s borders with Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda.

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Democratic Republic of Congo Mpox
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