Association of Tecovirimat Therapy With Mpox Symptom Improvement: A Cross-sectional Study—King County, Washington, May–October 2022

Author:

Karmarkar Ellora N1ORCID,Golden Matthew R12,Kerani Roxanne P13,Pogosjans Sargis4,Chow Eric J134,Bender Ignacio Rachel A15,Ramchandani Meena S12,Kay Meagan K4,Cannon Chase A12,Dombrowski Julia C12

Affiliation:

1. Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington , USA

2. Public Health - Seattle & King County HIV/STI/Hepatitis C Program , Seattle, Washington , USA

3. Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington , USA

4. Communicable Disease Epidemiology and Immunization Section, Public Health - Seattle & King County , Seattle, Washington , USA

5. Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center , Seattle, Washington , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Data on tecovirimat effectiveness for human mpox are limited. We conducted a retrospective cross-sectional interview-based study to identify associations between tecovirimat treatment and the mpox clinical course. Methods Using public health surveillance data from King County, Washington, we recruited and interviewed persons diagnosed with mpox during May–October 2022. We calculated descriptive statistics on demographics, vaccination status, comorbidities, and symptoms including 3 self-reported dates (symptom onset, first date of symptom improvement, and illness resolution). We used multivariable linear regression, stratified by illness severity, to evaluate the association of tecovirimat treatment with time to symptom improvement and time to illness resolution. We compared individuals who did not receive tecovirimat to participants who started tecovirimat early (≤5 days from symptom onset) and late (>5 days and ≤28 days from symptom onset) in their illness. Results Of 465 individuals diagnosed with mpox, 115 (25%) participated in this study. Eighty participants (70%) received tecovirimat and 43 (37%) initiated tecovirimat early. Sixty-eight (59%) reported severe symptoms during their illness, including proctitis (n = 38 [33%]), rectal bleeding (n = 27 [24%]), or severe pain (n = 24 [21%]). In the multivariable analysis, early tecovirimat was associated with shorter time to symptom improvement (−5.5 days, P = .04) among participants with severe illness but not among those with nonsevere illness (0.9 day, P = .66). Early tecovirimat was not associated with faster illness resolution, regardless of severity. Conclusions Our small study suggests that early tecovirimat initiation may hasten subjective symptomatic improvement in people with severe mpox. Larger randomized trials are needed to evaluate this finding.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

King Holmes Endowed Professorship held by J. C. D

Institute of Translational Health Sciences

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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