Prevalence of mpox viral DNA in cutaneous specimens of monkeypox-infected patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Published:2023-06-29
Issue:
Volume:13
Page:
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ISSN:2235-2988
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Container-title:Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology
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language:
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Short-container-title:Front. Cell. Infect. Microbiol.
Author:
Rani Isha,Goyal Anmol,Shamim Muhammad Aaqib,Satapathy Prakasini,Pal Amit,Squitti Rosanna,Goswami Kalyan,Sah Ranjit,Barboza Joshuan J.,Padhi Bijaya K.
Abstract
BackgroundHuman monkeypox (mpox) disease is a multicountry outbreak driven by human–human transmission which has resulted in an international public health emergency. However, there is limited evidence on the positivity rate of skin lesions for mpox viral DNA. We aim to fill this gap by estimating the pooled positivity rate of skin samples with mpox viral DNA from mpox patients globally.MethodsIn this systematic review and meta-analysis, seven databases and several preprint servers have been extensively searched until 17 January 2023 according to a prospectively registered protocol (PROSPERO: CRD42023392505). Articles including the positivity rate of skin samples with mpox viral DNA in mpox-confirmed patients were considered eligible. After a quality assessment, a random-effect meta-analysis was used for pooled prevalence. To explore and resolve heterogeneity, we used statistical methods for outlier detection, influence analysis, and sensitivity analysis.FindingsAmong the 331 articles retrieved after deduplication, 14 studies were finally included. The pooled positivity rate of the skin samples was 98.77% (95% CI: 94.74%–99.72%). After the removal of an influential outlier, I2 for heterogeneity dropped from 92.5% to 10.8%. Meta-regression did not reveal any significant moderator.Conclusion/interpretationThe present findings reinforce that skin lesions act as a reservoir of mpox viral DNA and contribute to a high infectivity risk. This may be a prevailing basis of prompt transmission during the current multicountry outbreak and also needs further investigation. The present imperative outcome may benefit in producing valuable preventive and management procedures in an appropriate health strategy.
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Emergency department approach to monkeypox;World Journal of Emergency Medicine;2023