| Literature DB >> 30666937 |
Reena H Doshi, Sarah Anne J Guagliardo, Jeffrey B Doty, Angelie Dzabatou Babeaux, Audrey Matheny, Jillybeth Burgado, Michael B Townsend, Clint N Morgan, Panayampalli Subbian Satheshkumar, Nestor Ndakala, Therese Kanjingankolo, Lambert Kitembo, Jean Malekani, Lem's Kalemba, Elisabeth Pukuta, Tobi N'kaya, Fabien Kangoula, Cynthia Moses, Andrea M McCollum, Mary G Reynolds, Jean-Vivien Mombouli, Yoshinori Nakazawa, Brett W Petersen.
Abstract
Monkeypox, caused by a zoonotic orthopoxvirus, is endemic in Central and West Africa. Monkeypox has been sporadically reported in the Republic of the Congo. During March 22-April 5, 2017, we investigated 43 suspected human monkeypox cases. We interviewed suspected case-patients and collected dried blood strips and vesicular and crust specimens (active lesions), which we tested for orthopoxvirus antibodies by ELISA and monkeypox virus and varicella zoster virus DNA by PCR. An ecologic investigation was conducted around Manfouété, and specimens from 105 small mammals were tested for anti-orthopoxvirus antibodies or DNA. Among the suspected human cases, 22 met the confirmed, probable, and possible case definitions. Only 18 patients had available dried blood strips; 100% were IgG positive, and 88.9% (16/18) were IgM positive. Among animals, only specimens from Cricetomys giant pouched rats showed presence of orthopoxvirus antibodies, adding evidence to this species' involvement in the transmission and maintenance of monkeypox virus in nature.Entities:
Keywords: Republic of the Congo; ecology; epidemiology; monkeypox; orthopoxvirus; viruses; zoonoses
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30666937 PMCID: PMC6346463 DOI: 10.3201/eid2502.181222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Figure 1Locations of monkeypox outbreaks and case classifications, Likouala Department, Republic of Congo, 2017. Numbers in circles indicate total number of cases in each area (all case classifications). Inset shows location of study area within Republic of Congo.
Criteria for monkeypox case classification, Likouala, Republic of the Congo, 2017
| Criteria |
| Clinical |
| Rash: muscular, papular, vesicular, pustular, generalized, or localized; discrete or confluent |
| Fever |
| Chills and/or sweats |
| Headache |
| Backache |
| Lymphadenopathy |
| Sore throat/cough |
| Coryza |
| Malaise |
| Prostration/distress |
| Epidemiologic |
| Exposure to a confirmed or probable human case of monkeypox |
| Exposure to an African endemic animal species of which cases have been identified with elevated levels of orthopoxvirus |
| Laboratory |
| Detection of orthopoxvirus DNA by PCR testing of a clinical specimen |
| Exclusion |
| No detection of orthopoxvirus DNA by PCR testing of a well-sampled rash lesion |
| Alternative diagnosis can fully explain the illness |
Exposure histories, illness characteristics, laboratory results, and outcomes for confirmed, probable, and possible monkeypox cases, Likouala Department, Republic of the Congo, 2017
| Case no. | Case category | Patient age, y/sex | Onset date | Orthopoxvirus* | District† | Outcome‡ | Exposure | ||
| IgG | IgM | PCR | |||||||
| 1e | Confirmed | 40/M | Jan 18 | No specimen | No specimen | Positive | Enyelle | Dead | Unknown |
| 2e | Confirmed | 9/M | Jan 20 | Unable to link | Unable to link | Positive | Enyelle | Alive | Son of 1e |
| 3e | Possible | 24/M | Mar 21 | Positive | Positive | No specimen | Enyelle | Alive | Unknown |
| 1d | Confirmed | 12/F | Jan 28 | Positive | Positive | Positive | Dongou | Alive | Hunter |
| 2d | Confirmed | 4/F | Feb 12 | No specimen | No specimen | Positive | Dongou | Dead | Contact with suspected case (never located) |
| 3d | Confirmed | 28/F | Feb 25 | Positive | Positive | Positive | Dongou | Alive | Hunter/bushmeat merchant, contact with 1d |
| 4d | Confirmed | 20/F | Mar 15 | Positive | Positive | Positive | Dongou | Alive | Hunter, contact with 1d, 3d, 15d |
| 5d | Probable | 33/F | Mar 24 | Positive | Positive | Collected, lost | Dongou | Alive | Mother of 2d |
| 6d | Probable | 3/F | Mar 30 | Positive | Positive | No specimen | Dongou | Alive | Family cluster, contact with 7d, 8d, 10–14d |
| 7d | Probable | 1/F | Unknown | Positive | Negative | No specimen | Dongou | Alive | Family cluster, contact with 6d, 8d, 10–14d |
| 8d | Probable | 30/M | Unknown | Positive | Positive | Not collected | Dongou | Alive | Hunter/family cluster, contact with 6d, 7d, 10–14d |
| 9d | Possible | 27/F | Unknown | Positive | Positive | Not collected | Dongou | Alive | Unknown |
| 10d | Probable | 11/M | Unknown | Positive | Positive | No specimen | Dongou | Alive | Hunter/family cluster, contact with 6–8d, 11–15d |
| 11d | Probable | 15/F | Unknown | Positive | Negative | No specimen | Dongou | Alive | Hunter/family cluster, contact with 6–8d, 10d, 12–14d |
| 12d | Probable | 5/F | Unknown | Positive | Positive | No specimen | Dongou | Alive | Family cluster, contact with 6–8d, 10d, 11d, 13d, 14d |
| 13d | Probable | 5/F | Unknown | Positive | Positive | No specimen | Dongou | Alive | Family cluster, contact with 6–8d, 10–12d, 14d |
| 14d | Probable | 28/F | Unknown | Positive | Positive | Not collected | Dongou | Alive | Hunter/family cluster, contact with 6–8d, 10–13d |
| 15d | Probable | 1/M | Unknown | Positive | Positive | Not collected | Dongou | Alive | Child of 3d |
| 1i | Probable | 14/F | Feb 2 | No specimen | No specimen | No specimen | Impfondo | Dead | Prepared bush meat for food (rats, rodents); sister of 2i–4i; first family member to fall ill |
| 2i | Confirmed | 11/F | Feb 24 | Positive | Positive | Positive | Impfondo | Alive | Sister of 1i, 3i, 4i |
| 3i | Probable | 3/M | Mar 4 | Positive | Positive | No specimen | Impfondo | Alive | Brother of 1i, 2i, 4i |
| 4i | Probable | 8/M | Mar 20 | Positive | Positive | Collected, lost | Impfondo | Alive | Brother of 1i, 2i, 3i |
*Unable to link is defined as an inability to match specimens with the case report form because of coding errors; no specimen means that a specimen was never collected. †All case-patients in Dongou were from Manfouété village. ‡Outcome is defined as patient status at the time of the investigation.
Figure 2Transmission chain: pattern of virus transmission hypothesized to have occurred during monkeypox outbreak in Impfondo, Likouala Department, Republic of Congo, 2017. Case-patients are arranged according to date of symptom onset. Solid lines indicate probable lines of person-to-person transmission and dashed lines depict undetermined (hypothesized) transmission events. The number of days between onsets (case interval) is approximated by length of lines. Case-patients illustrated are siblings belonging to the same household.
Summary of orthopoxvirus IgG ELISA results from mammals sampled in Manfouété, Likouala Department, Republic of the Congo, 2017
| Order | Genus | Common name | No. sampled | No. (%) positive |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rodentia |
| African wood mouse | 28 | 0 |
|
| Long-footed rat | 15 | 0 | |
|
| Soft-furred rat | 15 | 0 | |
|
| Giant pouched rat | 9 | 2 (22.2) | |
|
| Hump-nosed mouse | 6 | 0 | |
|
| Rat | 3 | 0 | |
|
| Zebra mouse | 2 | 0 | |
|
| Multimammate rat | 2 | 0 | |
|
|
| Brush-tailed porcupine | 1 | 0 |
| Eulipotyphla |
| Climbing shrew | 8 | 0 |
|
| White-toothed shrew | 8 | 0 | |
|
| Unknown shrew | Shrew | 6 | 0 |
| Chiroptera |
| Pipistrelle bat | 1 | 0 |
|
|
| Singing fruit bat | 1 | 0 |
| Total | 105 | 2 (1.9) |
Figure 3Bayesian majority rules consensus tree comparing sequences obtained from Cricetomys specimens collected in Likouala Department, Republic of the Congo, 2017 (boldface), with sequences from Olayemi et al. (). Vertical black bars distinguish clades representing Cricetomys giant pouched rat species proposed by Olayemi et al. Tree was constructed on the basis of 2 independent runs, 5 million generations each, based on a 409-bp fragment of the cytochrome B gene. Bayesian posterior probabilities for each node are shown. Scale bar indicates nucleotide substitutions per site.