Severe Monkeypox in Hospitalized Patients - United States, August 10-October 10, 2022.

dc.contributor.author

Miller, Maureen J

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Cash-Goldwasser, Shama

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Marx, Grace E

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Schrodt, Caroline A

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Kimball, Anne

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Padgett, Kia

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Noe, Rebecca S

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McCormick, David W

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Wong, Joshua M

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Labuda, Sarah M

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Borah, Brian F

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Zulu, Isaac

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Asif, Amimah

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Kaur, Gurpreet

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McNicholl, Janet M

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Kourtis, Athena

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Tadros, Andrew

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Reagan-Steiner, Sarah

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Ritter, Jana M

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Yu, Yon

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Yu, Patricia

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Clinton, Rachel

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Parker, Corrine

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Click, Eleanor S

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Salzer, Johanna S

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McCollum, Andrea M

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Petersen, Brett

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Minhaj, Faisal S

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Brown, Ericka

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Fischer, Michael P

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Atmar, Robert L

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DiNardo, Andrew R

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Xu, Ya

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Brown, Cameron

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Goodman, Jerry Clay

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Holloman, Ashley

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Gallardo, Julia

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Siatecka, Hanna

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Huffman, Georgia

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Powell, John

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Alapat, Philip

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Sarkar, Pralay

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Hanania, Nicola A

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Bruck, Or

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Brass, Steven D

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Mehta, Aneesh

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Dretler, Alexandra W

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Feldpausch, Amanda

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Pavlick, Jessica

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Spencer, Hillary

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Ghinai, Isaac

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Black, Stephanie R

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Hernandez-Guarin, Laura N

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Won, Sarah Y

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Shankaran, Shivanjali

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Simms, Andrew T

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Alarcón, Jemma

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O'Shea, Jesse G

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Brooks, John T

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McQuiston, Jennifer

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Honein, Margaret A

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O'Connor, Siobhán M

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Chatham-Stephens, Kevin

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O'Laughlin, Kevin

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Rao, Agam K

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Raizes, Elliot

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Gold, Jeremy AW

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Morris, Sapna Bamrah

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CDC Severe Monkeypox Investigations Team

dc.date.accessioned

2023-02-01T15:48:37Z

dc.date.available

2023-02-01T15:48:37Z

dc.date.issued

2022-11

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2023-02-01T15:48:36Z

dc.description.abstract

As of October 21, 2022, a total of 27,884 monkeypox cases (confirmed and probable) have been reported in the United States.§ Gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men have constituted a majority of cases, and persons with HIV infection and those from racial and ethnic minority groups have been disproportionately affected (1,2). During previous monkeypox outbreaks, severe manifestations of disease and poor outcomes have been reported among persons with HIV infection, particularly those with AIDS (3-5). This report summarizes findings from CDC clinical consultations provided for 57 patients aged ≥18 years who were hospitalized with severe manifestations of monkeypox during August 10-October 10, 2022, and highlights three clinically representative cases. Overall, 47 (82%) patients had HIV infection, four (9%) of whom were receiving antiretroviral therapy (ART) before monkeypox diagnosis. Most patients were male (95%) and 68% were non-Hispanic Black (Black). Overall, 17 (30%) patients received intensive care unit (ICU)-level care, and 12 (21%) have died. As of this report, monkeypox was a cause of death or contributing factor in five of these deaths; six deaths remain under investigation to determine whether monkeypox was a causal or contributing factor; and in one death, monkeypox was not a cause or contributing factor.** Health care providers and public health professionals should be aware that severe morbidity and mortality associated with monkeypox have been observed during the current outbreak in the United States (6,7), particularly among highly immunocompromised persons. Providers should test all sexually active patients with suspected monkeypox for HIV at the time of monkeypox testing unless a patient is already known to have HIV infection. Providers should consider early commencement and extended duration of monkeypox-directed therapy†† in highly immunocompromised patients with suspected or laboratory-diagnosed monkeypox.§§ Engaging all persons with HIV in sustained care remains a critical public health priority.

dc.identifier.issn

0149-2195

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1545-861X

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/26524

dc.language

eng

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Centers for Disease Control MMWR Office

dc.relation.ispartof

MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report

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10.15585/mmwr.mm7144e1

dc.subject

CDC Severe Monkeypox Investigations Team

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Humans

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Monkeypox

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HIV Infections

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Population Surveillance

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Homosexuality, Male

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Minority Groups

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Adolescent

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Adult

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United States

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Female

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Male

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Sexual and Gender Minorities

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Ethnicity

dc.title

Severe Monkeypox in Hospitalized Patients - United States, August 10-October 10, 2022.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.begin-page

1412

pubs.end-page

1417

pubs.issue

44

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Medicine, Infectious Diseases

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Duke Human Vaccine Institute

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Initiatives

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Duke Science & Society

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

71

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