Indian Journal of Public Health (Sep 2024)

Clinical and Epidemiological Characteristics of Mpox Cases Identified Through Case-based Surveillance in India, July 2022–January 2023

  • Serin Kuriakose,
  • Rajesh Kumar Gupta,
  • Anuj Kumar,
  • Jyoti Kumar,
  • Sanket Kulkarni,
  • Himanshu Chauhan,
  • Vineet Relhan,
  • V. Meenakshy,
  • Lakshmi Geetha Gopalakrishnan,
  • S. K. Singh,
  • Arti Bahl,
  • Sukarma Tanwar,
  • Tanzin Dikid

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/ijph.ijph_1381_23
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 3
pp. 374 – 379

Abstract

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Background: Of the 43 mpox cases reported by the WHO in South East Asia between January 2022 and March 2023, 24 (56%) were from India. Objectives: We describe the clinical and epidemiological profile of cases identified through India’s hospital case-based surveillance. Materials and Methods: We identified mpox cases as a positive result for mpox virus polymerase-chain-reaction assay, reported through surveillance from July 1, 2022 to January 7, 2023. Cases and clinicians were interviewed, and data were abstracted from the medical records. We conducted contact tracing among family, close social networks, and healthcare personnel staff for the first 17 cases. We collected the data on sociodemographics, clinical findings, and behavior, and described data using summary statistics. Results: We identified 24 laboratory-confirmed cases (42% females, median age 30 years, range 22–38), including one death (case fatality rate 4.2%). We collected clinical and behavioural data from 21 of 24 cases. All had rashes with vesicles and genital lesions; 7 (33%) reported genital lesions as the first symptom; and 3 (13%) reported complications. Among the 21 cases, all were sexually active, none self-identified as men having sex with men (MSM), and 6 (29%) reported multiple sex partners. We identified 51 contacts of the first 17 reported cases, none reported symptoms suggestive of mpox. Conclusion: The clinical and behavioral characteristics of mpox cases in India are consistent with the global 2022 outbreak, with the exception that no cases in India reported MSM. Most were sexually active young adult economic migrants and developed genital lesions.

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