| Literature DB >> 29231870 |
Mary G Reynolds1, Andrea M McCollum2, Beatrice Nguete3, Robert Shongo Lushima4, Brett W Petersen5.
Abstract
Monkeypox is a smallpox-like illness that can be accompanied by a range of significant medical complications. To date there are no standard or optimized guidelines for the clinical management of monkeypox (MPX) patients, particularly in low-resource settings. Consequently, patients can experience protracted illness and poor outcomes. Improving care necessitates developing a better understanding of the range of clinical manifestations-including complications and sequelae-as well as of features of illness that may be predictive of illness severity and poor outcomes. Experimental and natural infection of non-human primates with monkeypox virus can inform the approach to improving patient care, and may suggest options for pharmaceutical intervention. These studies have traditionally been performed to address the threat of smallpox bioterrorism and were designed with the intent of using MPX as a disease surrogate for smallpox. In many cases this necessitated employing high-dose, inhalational or intravenous challenge to recapitulate the severe manifestations of illness seen with smallpox. Overall, these data-and data from biomedical research involving burns, superficial wounds, herpes, eczema vaccinatum, and so forth-suggest that MPX patients could benefit from clinical support to mitigate the consequences of compromised skin and mucosa. This should include prevention and treatment of secondary bacterial infections (and other complications), ensuring adequate hydration and nutrition, and protecting vulnerable anatomical locations such as the eyes and genitals. A standard of care that considers these factors should be developed and assessed in different settings, using clinical metrics specific for MPX alongside consideration of antiviral therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Orthopoxvirus; animal model; clinical syndrome; monkeypox; standard of care
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29231870 PMCID: PMC5744154 DOI: 10.3390/v9120380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Spectrum of rash burden experienced by different individuals with acute monkeypox, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Lesion counts are based on whole-body estimates performed by trained health care personnel. (A) “benign”, 5–25 lesions (plus ocular involvement); (B) “moderee”, 26–100 lesions [plus ocular involvement]; (C) “grave”, 101–250 lesions (plus lymphadenopathy); (D) “plus grave”, >250 lesions. (Photo credits: (A) Jacque Katomba; (B,D) Gregoire Boketsu; (C) Toutou Likafi).
Figure 2Monkeypox virus infection can have significant impacts on multiple organ systems in the host, including the protective barriers of skin and mucosal surfaces, lymphatics, lungs, and gastrointestinal tract. Skin exfoliation can be significant, and inflammation of the airway and bronchopneumonia can lead to restricted air intake and diminished willingness and/or ability to ingest food and fluids. In rare instances, monkeypox can lead to sepsis. (Illustration: Jennifer Oosthuizen, CDC Division of Communication Services.).
Monkeypox: Clinical syndromes and possible treatment options.
| System Affected/Syndrome | Treatment Objective | Therapeutic Considerations/Clinical Setting | Follow-up/Monitoring | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Developed | Low-Resource | |||
| Respiratory tract | Maintain patent airways, prevent respiratory infection, atelectasis, and respiratory compromise | Suctioning of the nasopharynx and airways, incentive spirometry, chest physiotherapy, bronchodilation, oral/intravenous antibiotics for prophylaxis/treatment, nebulizer treatments, bronchoscopy, noninvasive ventilation (e.g., BiPAP or CPAP) 1, intubation/ventilation | Suctioning of the nasopharynx and airways, incentive spirometry, chest physiotherapy, bronchodilation, oral/intravenous antibiotics for prophylaxis/treatment | Respiratory rate, pulse oximetry |
| Sepsis | Hemodynamic stabilization | Oral/intravenous antibiotics, hemodynamic (e.g., intravenous fluid hydration and vasopressors), supplemental oxygen, corticosteroids, insulin | Oral/intravenous antibiotics, intravenous fluid hydration | Hemodynamic monitoring (e.g., pulse rate, blood pressure) |
| Gastrointestinal/mouth & throat sores | Minimize mucosal pain and disruption of food intake, promote lesion healing | Oral/topical analgesic medications | Oral/topical analgesic medications | Lesion burden, pain scale, food/fluid intake |
| Gastrointestinal/vomiting, diarrhea | Minimize gastrointestinal fluid losses | Oral/intravenous antiemetic and antidiarrheal medications, oral/intravenous rehydration | Oral/intravenous antiemetic and antidiarrheal medications, oral/intravenous rehydration | Frequency and volume of emesis and diarrhea, body weight, fluid intake/ouput |
| Fever | Prevent and treat episodes of fever | Antipyretic medications, external cooling | Antipyretic medications, external cooling | Routine temperature monitoring |
| Exfoliation, skin compromise | Minimize insensible fluid loss, promote lesion healing | Wash with soap and water or dilute water povidone-iodine solution, moisturized dressings, topical antibiotics (e.g., silver sulfadiazine), surgical debridement, skin grafts | Wash with soap and water or dilute water povidone-iodine solution, moisturized dressings, topical antibiotics (e.g., silver sulfadiazine) | Lesion count/rash burden, body weight, fluid intake/ouput |
| Superinfection skin | Prevention/treatment of secondary bacterial infections, promote lesion healing | Oral/intravenous antibiotics, incision and drainage, advanced wound management (e.g., negative pressure wound therapy) | Oral/intravenous antibiotics, incision and drainage | Fever, pain/tenderness, erythema, edema, exudate, warmth |
| Inflammation/lymphadenopathy | Minimize pain and decrease size of lymphadenopathy | Oral/intravenous anti-inflammatory/analgesic medications | Oral/intravenous anti-inflammatory/analgesic medications | Size of lymphadenopathy, pain/tenderness |
| Ocular infection | Prevent corneal scarring and vision impairment | Ophthalmic antibiotics/antivirals and corticosteroids; slit lamp examination | Ophthalmic antibiotics/antivirals and corticosteroids | Vision testing; repeat examination to assess recrudescence |
1 BiPAP, bilevel positive airway pressure; CPAP, continuous positive airway pressure.
Case Management: Suggested Performance Indicators and Clinical Metrics.
| Performance Indicator | Clinical Metric | Bench Mark/Target |
|---|---|---|
| Reduced mortality | % fatal cases | <5% |
| Reduced morbidity | % patients provided with supportive care regimen | >50% (good) |
| Reduced syndrome severity | % patients treated for syndromes/complications (respiratory, epidermal, gastrointestinal, inflammatory) | >50% (good) |
| Prevention of sequelae | % ocular complications treated with triflouridine | >50% (good) |
| Prevention of secondary transmission | % patients placed in isolation | >80% (good) |