Abstract

A multi-country outbreak of monkeypox virus (MPXV) infections was identified by the World Health Organization in May 2022. The western Canadian province of Alberta identified its first case of MPXV in a returning traveller on June 2, 2022. We undertook a retrospective testing exercise to evaluate whether MPXV may have been circulating in the province earlier. Skin (genital and non-genital) and mucosal lesion swabs submitted for herpes simplex virus (HSV)/varicella zoster virus (VZV)/syphilis testing from male patients attending sexually-transmitted infection clinics across the province of Alberta from January 28 to May 30, 2022 were retrieved from storage. The population tested was selected based on the epidemiology of the current 2022 multi-country MPXV outbreak. Samples underwent viral nucleic acid extraction and testing for the presence of Orthopoxvirus DNA using a commercial real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) kit. A total of 392 samples (representing 341 unique individuals of median age 31 years) were retrieved. Of them, 349 (89.0%) samples were submitted for HSV/VZV/syphilis testing, 13 (3.3%) for HSV/VZV only, and 30 (7.7%) for syphilis PCR only. None of the 392 samples tested were found to be positive for Orthopoxvirus DNA. The results of this study indicate that circulation of MPXV in a higher-risk population in Alberta, prior to the first case, was less likely. We recommend that other provinces/territories review their local epidemiology, context and resources prior to conducting similar studies.

Full Text
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