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Sustained Human Outbreak of a New MPXV Clade I Lineage in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Emmanuel Hasivirwe VakaniakiCris KacitaEddy Kinganda LusamakiÁine O'TooleTony Wawina-BokalangaDaniel MukadiAdrienne Amuri AzizaNadine Malyamungu-BubalaFranklin Mweshi-KumbanaLéandre Mutimbwa-MamboFreddy Belesi-SiangoliYves MujulaEdyth ParkerPauline-Chloé Muswamba-KayembeSabin S NunduRobert S LushimaJean-Claude Makangara-CigoloNoella Mulopo-MukanyaElisabeth Pukuta-SimbuPrince Akil-BandaliHugo KavungaOmbotimbe AbdramaneIsabel BrosiusEugene BangwenKoen O A VercauterenNadia Adjoa Sam-AguduEdward J MillsOlivier Tshiani-MbayaNicole A HoffAnne W RimoinLisa E HensleyJason KindrachukCheryl BaxterTulio de OliveiraAhidjo AyoubaMartine PeetersEric DelaporteSteve Ahuka-MundekeEmma L MohrNancy J SullivanJean-Jacques Muyembe-TamfumJean B NachegaAndrew RambautLaurens LiesenborghsPlacide Mbala-Kingebeni
Published in: Nature medicine (2024)
Outbreaks of mpox have historically resulted from zoonotic spillover of clade I monkeypox virus (MPXV) in Central Africa and clade II MPXV in West Africa. In 2022, subclade IIb caused a global epidemic linked to transmission through sexual contact. Here, we describe the epidemiological and genomic features of an mpox outbreak in a mining region in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), caused by clade I MPXV. Surveillance data collected between September 2023 and January 2024 identified 241 suspected cases. Genomic analysis demonstrates a distinct clade I lineage divergent from previously circulating strains in the DRC. Of the 108 PCR-confirmed mpox cases, the median age of individuals was 22 years, 51.9% were female, and 29% were sex workers, suggesting a potential role for sexual transmission. The predominance of APOBEC3-type mutations and the estimated emergence time around mid-September 2023 imply recent sustained human-to-human transmission.
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