Routes of transmission of mpox by virus clade and geographic distribution: A systematic review.
Majid M Alshamrani, Aiman El-Saed, Sarah Al-Fayez, Kholod AlAmeer, Mohammed Al Zunitan, Mohammed Abalkhail, Fatmah Othman, Fayssal Farahat, Syed Nazeer, Wafaa Al Nasser, Maher Alharbi, Tom Fletcher, Tochi Okwor, Hibak Mahamed, Hannah Hamilton Hurwitz
Abstract
Open AccessMpox epidemiology has experienced a dramatic change in recent years with a marked shift in transmission dynamics. The objective was to assess the route of transmission of mpox by virus clade and geographic distribution. A systematic review of studies with transmission data published between September 2022 and September 2024 was conducted. A total 222 studies including 45,553 mpox patients were included. Approximately 93.0 % of the patients were males and 98.6 % were adults. Approximately 89.1 % were men who have sex with men, 5.3 % were heterosexual men, and 5.5 % were heterosexual women. Approximately 95.3 % reported sexual contact (65.1 % confirmed and 30.3 % suspected), 2.9 % close non-sexual contact, and 1.8 % multiple/other routes (not including inhalation). Sexual contact represented > 90 % of transmission in all regions but African region. Most studies reported clade data showed clade IIb with a similar transmission pattern as described above. This can support the formulation of infection prevention and control recommendations.