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A service for food industry professionals · Wednesday, June 26, 2024 · 722,942,896 Articles · 3+ Million Readers

Minister Joe Phaahla on outbreak of Mpox disease in South Africa and efforts to curb the spread

A global outbreak of Mpox disease, formerly known as Monkey pox, has been ongoing since 2022. Mpox is a notifiable medical condition which the Health Care Workers are required to report all the suspected and confirmed cases. Notifiable Medical Conditions refer to diseases that are of public health importance because they pose significant public health risks that can result in disease outbreaks or disease epidemics with high case fatality rates both nationally and internationally.

The last time South Africa recorded positive cases of Mpox was in 2022 when five cases confirmed in the Western Cape, KwaZulu-Natal, Limpopo and Gauteng, with no cases reported in 2023. According to the World Health Organization multi-country outbreak of mpox published on 31 May 2024, cumulatively from 01 January 2022 through 30 April 2024, a total of 97 208 laboratory confirmed cases of mpox, including 186 deaths from 117 countries in all six WHO regions were reported. A total of 528 new laboratory-confirmed cases were reported in April, which represents a 21.2% decline in the number of new cases reported during the preceding month of March, including retrospectively reported for previous months.

The most affected WHO regions, in order by number of laboratory-confirmed cases, were the Region of the Americas, the African Region, the European Region, the South-East Asia Region, and the Western Pacific Region. In the African Region, the DRC reported the most (99.6%) of the confirmed mpox cases in the reporting month.

The disease is caused by the monkeypox virus (MPXV), an orthopoxvirus that transmits from person to person through close contact, and from unknown animal reservoirs in East, Central, and West Africa.  This multi-country Mpox outbreak is characterised by sustained human-to-human transmission via direct skin-to-skin and sexual contact; people living with HIV are disproportionately affected.

South Africa is amongst the countries currently experiencing the outbreak of Mpox, a viral infection which spreads between people and occasionally from the environment to people via objects and surfaces that have been touched by a person with mpox.

South Africa has recorded a total number of 5 laboratory-confirmed cases and one death. Two of these cases were confirmed in Gauteng and three in KwaZulu-Natal. The death that occurred is amongst the two cases reported in Gauteng. The patient passed-on on Monday, 10 June 2024 in Tembisa Hospital. All cases/patients are males aged between 30-39 years without travel history to the countries currently experiencing an outbreak, which suggests there is local transmission of this infectious disease in the country.

All five cases were classified severe cases as per WHO definition requiring hospitalisation. The cases have co-morbidities and have been identified as key populations, Men who have Sex with Men (MSM). Thus, the Department is reaching out to organisations working on HIV programmes and with key populations in addition to other stakeholders to implement targeted communication to intensify awareness about the outbreak and local transmission of the disease.

One patient has been discharged, one discharged for home isolation and follow ups being made. Two cases are still admitted in hospital. Sequencing analysis of three of the cases revealed mpox clade IIb, in keeping with the multi-country mpox outbreak which began in 2022.

Breakdown of the cases

Cases

Confirmation Date

Area/Province

Age

Hospitalised

Case 1

8 May 2024

Sedibeng, GP

35

Yes

Case 2

21 May 2024

eThekwini, KZN

39

Yes

Case 3

31 May 2024

eThekwini, KZN

30

Yes

Case 4

03 June 2024

eThekwini, KZN

33

Yes

Case 5

07 June 2024

Tembisa, GP

37

Yes

 

All National Health Laboratory Service (NHLS) laboratories have been sensitised to the ongoing outbreak and are referring samples for testing to the NICD. Private sector laboratories are also testing for mpox while NICD serves as the reference laboratory. Since the beginning of 2024, the NICD has received twelve mpox test requests, with three testing positive. The other two cases were diagnosed by private laboratories. Guidelines have been updated and shared widely across networks of healthcare workers using various platform.

Epidemiology and Surveillance

The National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) continues with epidemiological and surveillance activities to identify cases for investigation to estimate the magnitude of disease through systematic data collection and analysis. A total of 38 contacts were identified in KwaZulu-Natal by the outbreak response teams. The contacts include household contacts (16), hospital contacts (10), partners/sexual partners (5) and friends (7). One of the cases indicated to have had sexual contact with multiple partners including both males and females.

Regarding the case notified on the 08 May 2024 in Gauteng, seven (07) contacts have been followed up for 21 days, and none showed any signs and symptoms of mpox. Regarding the case notified on the 07 June 2024, the line list of the identified contacts was developed, they will be monitored for symptoms for a period of 21 days. Attempts will be made to identify other additional contacts.

The provinces have been notifying all the cases that meet the case definition of a suspected mpox case in the Notifiable Medical Condition (NMC) System.  Meanwhile, the Outbreak Response Team comprising of experts from the Department, provinces, NICD, WHO and other stakeholders in the health sector have embarked on contact tracing and case finding in the affected provinces.

Treatment

At the current moment, there is no registered treatment for Mpox in South Africa. However, the World Health Organization recommends the use of Tecovirimat (known as TPOXX) for treatment of severe cases, such as in individuals with a CD4 count of less than 350.  However, the Department has obtained Tecovirimat via Section 21 SAPHRA approval on compassionate use basis for the five known patients with severe disease.

Three of the five cases had access to Tecovirimat treatment as advocated by the NICD. The drug was obtained via Section 21 and the SAPHRA approval process; and donated by the WHO. SAPHRA has since approved a request for a small stockpile of Tecovirimat which the WHO will support as a donation. Our intention is to obtain a stockpile of Tecovirimat treatment for rapid deployment in case the current situation leads to a wider outbreak. The stock will be donated by the World Health Organization.

As far as the vaccine is concerned, options are being considered as to which population groups should be targeted. South Africa is trying to source vaccine from WHO member countries who have stockpiles that exceed their needs as well as from GAVI. These vaccines will be stored and distributed from our provincial depots.

Additional intervention is being considered, as National Advisory Group for Immunisation (NAGI) Technical Working Group for Mpox vaccines has been appointed and is considering mpox vaccine for both pre and post-exposure administration for high-risk groups, including but not limited to sex workers, men-who-have-sex-with-men, healthcare workers and laboratory workers.

Risk Communications

The Department working together with partner organisations, has intensified both targeted and public awareness using various channels of communications to empower the citizens with crucial information related to Mpox to make well informed health decisions. As part of additional efforts to increase opportunity for engagement, a clinical management webinar has been convened and was attended by five-hundred healthcare workers and public health professionals from across the country.

However, the most important intervention at present remains risk communication and community engagement (RCCE), which is being implemented, including addressing the high-risk population without discriminating to avoid stigma.  We are also reaching out to organisations working with the HIV programmes and key populations such as the MSM to reach their members since they fall under the category of people at risk.

Although, the World Health Organization has not recommended any travel restrictions, it is important for travellers to and from endemic countries to alert health officials on the situation to enable them to provide guidance for case detection and management. We can prevent further spread of this infectious disease if those with suspected symptoms or who were in contact with known cases/patients present themselves at health care facilities on time for early diagnosis and effective treatment.  

We can disrupt the local transmission by supporting those diagnosed with this disease to take their treatment to prevent infecting others. We can prevent avoidable deaths by cooperating with health officials when they conduct contact tracing and case finding.

One death is too many, especially from a preventable and manageable disease like mpox.

I thank you.

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