| Literature DB >> 36074752 |
Faisal S Minhaj, Julia K Petras, Jennifer A Brown, Anil T Mangla, Kelly Russo, Christina Willut, Michelle Lee, Jason Beverley, Rachel Harold, Lauren Milroy, Brian Pope, Emily Gould, Cole Beeler, Jack Schneider, Heba H Mostafa, Shana Godfred-Cato, Eleanor S Click, Brian F Borah, Romeo R Galang, Shama Cash-Goldwasser, Joshua M Wong, David W McCormick, Patricia A Yu, Victoria Shelus, Ann Carpenter, Sabrina Schatzman, David Lowe, Michael B Townsend, Whitni Davidson, Nhien T Wynn, Panayampalli S Satheshkumar, Siobhán M O'Connor, Kevin O'Laughlin, Agam K Rao, Andrea M McCollum, María E Negrón, Christina L Hutson, Johanna S Salzer.
Abstract
Since May 2022, approximately 20,000 cases of monkeypox have been identified in the United States, part of a global outbreak occurring in approximately 90 countries and currently affecting primarily gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men (MSM) (1). Monkeypox virus (MPXV) spreads from person to person through close, prolonged contact; a small number of cases have occurred in populations who are not MSM (e.g., women and children), and testing is recommended for persons who meet the suspected case definition* (1). CDC previously developed five real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assays for detection of orthopoxviruses from lesion specimens (2,3). CDC was granted 510(k) clearance for the nonvariola-orthopoxvirus (NVO)-specific PCR assay by the Food and Drug Administration. This assay was implemented within the Laboratory Response Network (LRN) in the early 2000s and became critical for early detection of MPXV and implementation of public health action in previous travel-associated cases as well as during the current outbreak (4-7). PCR assays (NVO and other Orthopoxvirus laboratory developed tests [LDT]) represent the primary tool for monkeypox diagnosis. These tests are highly sensitive, and cross-contamination from other MPXV specimens being processed, tested, or both alongside negative specimens can occasionally lead to false-positive results. This report describes three patients who had atypical rashes and no epidemiologic link to a monkeypox case or known risk factors; these persons received diagnoses of monkeypox based on late cycle threshold (Ct) values ≥34, which were false-positive test results. The initial diagnoses were followed by administration of antiviral treatment (i.e., tecovirimat) and JYNNEOS vaccine postexposure prophylaxis (PEP) to patients' close contacts. After receiving subsequent testing, none of the three patients was confirmed to have monkeypox. Knowledge gained from these and other cases resulted in changes to CDC guidance. When testing for monkeypox in specimens from patients without an epidemiologic link or risk factors or who do not meet clinical criteria (or where these are unknown), laboratory scientists should reextract and retest specimens with late Ct values (based on this report, Ct ≥34 is recommended) (8). CDC can be consulted for complex cases including those that appear atypical or questionable cases and can perform additional viral species- and clade-specific PCR testing and antiorthopoxvirus serologic testing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36074752 PMCID: PMC9470221 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm7136e1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 35.301
Characteristic of and testing, interventions, and treatment given to persons initially receiving monkeypox diagnoses based on a false-positive test result— United States, 2022
| Patient | Patient characteristic | Symptoms | Initial real-time PCR test result* | Additional MPXV, NVO, or OPXV real-time PCR test result* | IgM† | Treatment administered | Total no. of contacts who received PEP§ (adults, children) | Suspected alternative diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Pregnant woman, 37 weeks’ gestation | Rash, pruritus |
| MPXV: inconclusive¶ | Neg | Tecovirimat to patient A, VIGIV to neonate | 1 (1, 0) | Bed bugs |
| NVO Ct: 34.30 | ||||||||
| B | Elementary school-aged child | Rash, fatigue, headache, decreased appetite, fever |
| Neg | NP | Tecovirimat | 4 (2, 2) | Hand, foot, and mouth disease |
| NVO Ct: 35.82 | NVO Ct: >40** | |||||||
| C | Infant | Diarrhea, lymphadenopathy, fever, rash |
| MPXV: Inconclusive¶ | Neg | Tecovirimat | 19 (12, 7) | Pending |
| NVO Ct: 34.67 | Neg | |||||||
| OPVX Ct: 36.71 | OPXV Ct: >40 | |||||||
| Neg | ||||||||
| NVO Ct >40 |
Abbreviations: Ct = cycle threshold; IgM = immunoglobulin M; MPXV = Monkeypox virus; Neg = negative; NP = not performed; NVO = non-variola Orthopoxvirus; OPXV = Orthopoxvirus; PCR = polymerase chain reaction; PEP = postexposure prophylaxis; VIGIV = vaccinia immune globulin intravenous.
* Real-time PCR assays for testing of orthopoxviruses and Monkeypox virus–specific assays have varying Ct cutoffs depending on assay used. Cutoffs can range from approximately 37 to 40.
† Antiorthopoxvirus IgM antibody is expected to be detectable 4–56 days after rash onset in patients with monkeypox.
§ JYNNEOS vaccine.
¶ Test results from duplicate swab from the initial lesion, inconclusive based on internal control indicating inadequate specimen collection.
** Test results from a reextraction and retesting of the initial lesion swab.
FIGURETimeline of patient testing and public health interventions for false-positive Monkeypox virus test results — United States, 2022
Abbreviations: PCR = polymerase chain reaction; PEP = postexposure prophylaxis.