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Reassessment of Evidence about Coinfection of Chickenpox and Monkeypox (Mpox) in African Children

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VIRUSES-BASEL
卷 14, 期 12, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14122800

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varicella-zoster virus; herpesvirus; variola; mousepox; orthopox virus; murid herpesvirus-4; interleukin-6

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In West and Central Africa, monkeypox primarily affects older children, adolescents, and young adults. Coinfections of chickenpox and monkeypox have been observed, suggesting that chickenpox may be a risk factor for acquiring monkeypox. The hypothesis is that the skin lesions from chickenpox provide an entry site for the monkeypox virus, which is present in the patient's environment. Additionally, prior chickenpox infection moderates the severity of the secondary monkeypox infection.
In west and central Africa, monkeypox occurs mainly in older children, adolescents and young adults. In two large epidemiology studies of monkeypox outbreaks, the investigators observed a sizable number of coinfections of chickenpox (varicella) and monkeypox. Based on a review of the literature, we propose that chickenpox (human herpesvirus-3 infection) is a risk factor for acquisition of monkeypox infection. Our hypothesis states that the chickenpox skin lesion provides an entry site for the monkeypox virus, which is harbored on a fomite in the environment of the patient. The fact that monkeypox can enter via a scratch or abrasion is a known mechanism of spread for three other poxviruses, including mousepox (ectromelia), orf and molluscum contagiosum. There are many similarities in pathogenesis between certain poxviruses and chickenpox, including a viremia with a cellular stress response leading to high levels of the IL-6 cytokine. One very revealing observation in the two epidemiology studies was that the number of pox as well as the severity of disease in children with chickenpox and monkeypox coinfection was not greater than found in children with monkeypox alone. Based on the above observations, we conclude that, when chickenpox precedes monkeypox, priming of the immune system by the earlier chickenpox infection moderates the severity of the secondary infection with monkeypox. This conclusion also has important public health implications about chickenpox surveillance.

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