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Mpox in pregnancy: Management, risks and challenges in Africa and lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Akaninyene Eseme Bernard UbomSebastine Oseghae OiwohAkinyosoye Deji AjiboyeSolomon NyecheAdu Appiah-KubiAisha Ebehireme SokunbiChristabel Mweene MbiizaFatai Olatunde OlanrewajuEdesiri Ejovwoke IghorodjeAyesha AkinkugbeJoseph OkoegualeOluwaseun Dorcas OjoEmmanuel Adeiza UnwahaPeter Chibuzor OrijiTolulope Oluwatimileyin AdebawojoObinna Prince EkwebalamTreasure Inyeneobong OkwaraohaOmotade Adebimpe IjarotimiReuben Agbons EifediyiSylvanus Akhalufo OkogbeninTochi Joy OkworJohn Igemo IkimaloOluwafemi KutiOlusola Benjamin FasubaaDimie Ogoina
Published in: International journal of gynaecology and obstetrics: the official organ of the International Federation of Gynaecology and Obstetrics (2023)
Data on mpox in pregnancy are currently limited. Historically, only 65 cases in pregnancy have been reported globally since mpox was discovered in 1958. This includes 59 cases in the current outbreak. Vertical transmission was confirmed in one patient. Pregnant women are at high risk of severe disease owing to immunological and hormonal changes that increase susceptibility to infections in pregnancy. African women appear to be at higher risk of mpox infection and adverse outcomes in pregnancy for epidemiological and immunologic reasons, in addition to the background high rates of adverse feto-maternal outcomes in the region. This risk is potentially heightened during the COVID-19 pandemic due to the possibility of mpox virus exportation/importation as a result of the lifting of movement restrictions and trans-border travels between countries affected by the current outbreak. Furthermore, coinfection with mpox and COVID-19 in pregnancy is possible, and the clinical features of both conditions may overlap. Challenges of diagnosis and management of mpox in pregnancy in Africa include patients concealing their travel history from healthcare providers and absconding from/evading isolation after diagnosis, shortage of personal protective equipment and polymerase chain reaction testing facilities for diagnosis, vaccine hesitancy/resistance, and poor disease notification systems. There is a need for local, regional and global support to strengthen the capacity of African countries to address these challenges and potentially reduce the disease burden among pregnant women in the continent.
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