Zürcher Nachrichten - Fears new 'most dangerous' mpox strain could cross borders

EUR -
AED 3.782991
AFN 73.125453
ALL 97.484112
AMD 408.731404
ANG 1.855762
AOA 940.807145
ARS 1067.790574
AUD 1.662199
AWG 1.856467
AZN 1.751841
BAM 1.955288
BBD 2.079355
BDT 125.620014
BGN 1.953415
BHD 0.388246
BIF 3007.425308
BMD 1.02994
BND 1.409831
BOB 7.116136
BRL 6.217338
BSD 1.02993
BTN 88.395842
BWP 14.434359
BYN 3.370217
BYR 20186.827412
BZD 2.068658
CAD 1.48211
CDF 2955.928479
CHF 0.939558
CLF 0.037363
CLP 1030.970157
CNY 7.551108
CNH 7.576513
COP 4458.868499
CRC 520.863543
CUC 1.02994
CUP 27.293415
CVE 110.435344
CZK 25.091454
DJF 183.041252
DKK 7.460866
DOP 63.336175
DZD 139.811274
EGP 52.070787
ERN 15.449103
ETB 129.563896
FJD 2.399194
FKP 0.815694
GBP 0.836731
GEL 2.92545
GGP 0.815694
GHS 15.2228
GIP 0.815694
GMD 73.639503
GNF 8898.683306
GTQ 7.947879
GYD 215.465644
HKD 8.015906
HNL 26.21246
HRK 7.387664
HTG 134.454775
HUF 413.797004
IDR 16717.370942
ILS 3.764261
IMP 0.815694
INR 88.476703
IQD 1349.221628
IRR 43347.665613
ISK 145.097986
JEP 0.815694
JMD 161.487693
JOD 0.730636
JPY 162.847444
KES 133.313839
KGS 89.604995
KHR 4161.988032
KMF 491.861937
KPW 926.945581
KRW 1503.15627
KWD 0.3175
KYD 0.858184
KZT 541.458148
LAK 22465.574672
LBP 92282.639183
LKR 303.440504
LRD 192.855647
LSL 19.486463
LTL 3.041146
LVL 0.623001
LYD 5.072463
MAD 10.347291
MDL 19.18616
MGA 4840.718706
MKD 61.520973
MMK 3345.20551
MNT 3499.736578
MOP 8.253898
MRU 41.017373
MUR 48.170396
MVR 15.871113
MWK 1784.370718
MXN 21.114706
MYR 4.637833
MZN 65.82352
NAD 19.487107
NGN 1593.722945
NIO 37.809383
NOK 11.73519
NPR 141.432947
NZD 1.83954
OMR 0.396503
PAB 1.02983
PEN 3.875681
PGK 4.080111
PHP 60.228889
PKR 287.045459
PLN 4.26061
PYG 8123.871691
QAR 3.749499
RON 4.972134
RSD 117.084672
RUB 105.308317
RWF 1426.467141
SAR 3.86645
SBD 8.684767
SCR 15.207104
SDG 618.993729
SEK 11.485846
SGD 1.409252
SHP 0.815694
SLE 23.481242
SLL 21597.3336
SOS 588.608122
SRD 36.110218
STD 21317.682163
SVC 9.010596
SYP 2587.755836
SZL 19.486652
THB 35.584686
TJS 11.25626
TMT 3.604791
TND 3.306378
TOP 2.41222
TRY 36.384398
TTD 6.991168
TWD 33.866907
TZS 2585.150315
UAH 43.662749
UGX 3809.00211
USD 1.02994
UYU 44.958004
UZS 13378.923054
VES 55.399457
VND 26142.456469
VUV 122.27656
WST 2.845506
XAF 655.791562
XAG 0.034224
XAU 0.000386
XCD 2.783465
XDR 0.793092
XOF 652.981583
XPF 119.331742
YER 256.669454
ZAR 19.507077
ZMK 9270.695132
ZMW 28.603506
ZWL 331.640316
  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    23.1

    -0.56%

  • NGG

    -0.6200

    57.98

    -1.07%

  • SCS

    0.1000

    11.3

    +0.88%

  • GSK

    -0.3400

    33.75

    -1.01%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    58.63

    +0.75%

  • RYCEF

    0.0200

    7.22

    +0.28%

  • RBGPF

    -2.6900

    59.31

    -4.54%

  • BTI

    -0.0400

    36.74

    -0.11%

  • BCE

    -0.2300

    23.63

    -0.97%

  • BCC

    -0.8200

    117.4

    -0.7%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.4

    -0.26%

  • AZN

    -0.0600

    66.58

    -0.09%

  • RELX

    0.7900

    46.77

    +1.69%

  • BP

    -0.7100

    31.12

    -2.28%

  • VOD

    -0.2000

    8.21

    -2.44%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.22

    0%

Fears new 'most dangerous' mpox strain could cross borders
Fears new 'most dangerous' mpox strain could cross borders / Photo: Brian W.J. Mahy - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention/AFP/File

Fears new 'most dangerous' mpox strain could cross borders

A new deadlier strain of mpox that transmits more easily between people is killing children and causing miscarriages in the Democratic Republic of Congo and may have already spread to neighbouring countries, researchers have warned.

Text size:

All countries should be preparing for "this new strain before it spreads to other places, before it is too late," John Claude Udahemuka, a researcher at the University of Rwanda studying the outbreak, told AFP.

A global outbreak of a new strain of Mpox, previously known as monkeypox, in 2022 spread to more than 110 countries, mostly affecting gay and bisexual men. That was the clade II strain.

But there have been regular outbreaks of the clade I strain -- which is 10 times deadlier -- in Africa since it was first detected in DR Congo in 1970.

While the global outbreak was largely sexually transmitted, people in Africa normally caught clade I from infected animals, such as when eating bushmeat.

But "it was obvious something was different" about an mpox outbreak detected among sex workers in the remote mining Congolese town of Kamituga in September last year, Udahemuka told an online press conference.

Unlike previous outbreaks in the central African country, the virus was being transmitted via sex between heterosexuals.

Testing revealed it was a mutated variant of the original strain called clade Ib.

It is "undoubtedly the most dangerous strain so far," Udahemuka said.

More than 1,000 cases of clade Ib have been reported in South Kivu province since, said Leandre Murhula Masirika, who has led local research into the outbreak.

There are more than 20 new cases every week in Kamituga alone -- and the number is rising, he warned.

- 'Incredibly worrying' -

Five percent of adults and 10 percent of children who get the strain die, researchers said.

It gives sufferers "horrendous whole body rashes," unlike clade II, which caused lesions normally more limited to the genital area, said Trudie Lang, a global health researcher at Oxford University.

The clade Ib strain has also been spreading through non-sexual contact between people -- including among families or children playing together at school -- marking a major change from previous outbreaks, the researchers said.

There has been a "high amount" of transmission between mothers or carers and children, Lang said.

The strain has also caused numerous miscarriages, and researchers are studying its long-term effect on fertility.

These significant differences from previous mpox strains are "incredibly worrying," Lang said.

And the extreme cases turning up at hospital are likely "the tip of the iceberg," because many patients likely have less severe symptoms, she added.

There remain many "important unknowns" about the new strain, Lang cautioned, comparing this stage of investigation to the early days of Covid-19.

Out of 384 people who died from all mpox strains in DR Congo this year, more than 60 percent were children, according to the World Health Organization.

- Fears of wider outbreak -

So far, clade Ib has spread to the Congolese cities of Bukavu, Uvira and Kamanyola -- and this week was declared in North Kivu province's capital, Goma, the researchers said.

These cities are near DR Congo's borders with Rwanda, Burundi and Uganda.

While the new strain has not been officially reported outside of DR Congo, it may have already spread to neighbouring nations, Murhula Masirika said. Some infected sex workers came from these countries, he added.

And Goma, notably, has an international airport.

"There is definitely the opportunity for this to get on an airplane," Lang said, calling on the world to act quickly to contain the outbreak.

One way researchers want to stem the outbreak is to vaccinate local sex workers.

It remains to be determined whether existing vaccines will work for the new strain.

But smallpox vaccines -- which are cheap, widely available in many countries, and can work for mpox -- have not been made available in Kamituga, Udahemuka said.

Researchers in Africa have been calling for DR Congo to get access to the vaccines and treatments used against mpox in much of the world during the global outbreak.

Because if this strain spreads further it will cause "really great damage," Murhula Masirika warned.

"We are very afraid."

A.Weber--NZN