Lives of Skin Lesions in Monkeypox: Histomorphological, Immunohistochemical, and Clinical Correlations in a Small Case Series

Author:

Schmidle Paul1ORCID,Leson Sonja1,Wieland Ulrike2ORCID,Böer-Auer Almut13,Metze Dieter1,Braun Stephan A.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology, University Hospital Muenster, University of Muenster, 48149 Muenster, Germany

2. Institute of Virology, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital Cologne, University of Cologne, 50931 Cologne, Germany

3. Dermatologikum Hamburg, 20354 Hamburg, Germany

4. Department of Dermatology, Medical Faculty, Heinrich-Heine University, 40225 Duesseldorf, Germany

Abstract

Monkeypox (mpox), a former rare viral zoonosis, has increasingly made it into the public eye since the major outbreak that started in May 2022. Mpox presents with skin lesions that change over time and go through different stages (macular, papular, pustular, and early and late ulceration). In this study, we evaluated skin biopsies of all stages. Therefore, five biopsies from four patients were analyzed histologically, immunohistochemically with anti-Vaccinia virus antibodies, and electron-microscopically. Notably, the early macular stage only showed subtle viropathic changes; it did not express of Orthopoxvirus proteins in immunohistochemistry and therefore can easily be missed histologically. In later stages, immunohistochemistry with anti-Vaccinia virus antibodies might be useful to distinguish mpox from differential diagnoses such as herpes virus infections. In the ulcerative stages, the identified occlusive vasculopathic changes could be an explanation for the severe pain of the lesions reported by some patients. Despite the small number of samples examined, our analysis suggests that the histological findings of mpox are highly dependent on the stage of the biopsied lesion. Therefore, knowledge of all different stages of histology is necessary to reliably diagnose mpox histologically, especially when molecular testing is not available.

Funder

Open Access Publication Fund of the University of Muenster

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases

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