Hanft Wyatt, Saadeh Kayla, Snyder Robert E, Watson Jessica, Tang Eric C, Chapman Eric, Ramos Marisa, Johnson Kelly A
Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STD) Control Branch, California Department of Public Health (CDPH), Richmond and Sacramento, California.
Sex Transm Dis. 2025 Jun 4. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000002195.
Inoculation of the eye with monkeypox virus can cause vision-threatening disease necessitating hospitalization and urgent treatment. Ocular mpox is poorly understood, including who is most affected.
We performed a cross-sectional study comparing ocular and non-ocular mpox cases reported to the California Department of Public Health 5/1/2022-9/30/2023. Chi-squared and t-tests were used to compare between-group sociodemographic characteristics, HIV status, and vaccine status. Bivariate and multivariate logistic regression adjusting for HIV and race/ethnicity were used to calculate odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for the association between JYNNEOS vaccination and ocular mpox.
Of 5,878 mpox infections, 2,403 (40.9%) had complete ocular symptom-reporting and were included in this analysis. Of these, 260 (10.8%) were ocular cases. Among the 2,403 included cases, most were cisgender men (94.6%) and reported male-to-male sexual contact (72.0%). The proportion of non-ocular versus ocular mpox cases differed significantly by race/ethnicity and HIV status (p < 0.05), with more ocular cases being Hispanic/Latinx (50.8% vs 41.8%), Black (14.2% vs 8.9%), and with HIV (50.8% vs 40.4%). After adjusting for race/ethnicity and HIV status, people with ≥1 dose of JYNNEOS had approximately half the odds of having ocular symptoms compared to people who were unvaccinated (adjusted OR 0.52; 95% CI 0.24-0.97).
A higher proportion of Black, Latinx, or people living with HIV had ocular mpox symptoms, suggesting these groups may benefit from focused interventions to prevent infection and this complication. JYNNEOS prior to mpox exposure may protect against ocular complications, stressing the importance of vaccination to prevent severe sequelae, especially for vulnerable populations.
用猴痘病毒感染眼睛可导致威胁视力的疾病,需要住院和紧急治疗。人们对眼部猴痘了解甚少,包括哪些人受影响最大。
我们进行了一项横断面研究,比较了2022年5月1日至2023年9月30日向加利福尼亚州公共卫生部报告的眼部和非眼部猴痘病例。采用卡方检验和t检验比较组间社会人口学特征、HIV状态和疫苗接种状态。使用调整了HIV和种族/族裔的二元和多元逻辑回归来计算JYNNEOS疫苗接种与眼部猴痘之间关联的比值比和95%置信区间。
在5878例猴痘感染病例中,2403例(40.9%)有完整的眼部症状报告并纳入本分析。其中,260例(10.8%)为眼部病例。在纳入的2403例病例中,大多数是顺性别男性(94.6%),并报告有男男性接触(72.0%)。非眼部与眼部猴痘病例的比例在种族/族裔和HIV状态方面存在显著差异(p<0.05),更多的眼部病例是西班牙裔/拉丁裔(50.8%对41.8%)、黑人(14.2%对8.9%)以及HIV感染者(50.8%对40.4%)。在调整种族/族裔和HIV状态后,与未接种疫苗的人相比,接种≥1剂JYNNEOS的人出现眼部症状的几率约为一半(调整后的比值比为0.52;95%置信区间为0.24 - 0.97)。
黑人、拉丁裔或HIV感染者中出现眼部猴痘症状的比例较高,这表明这些群体可能受益于针对性的干预措施以预防感染和这种并发症。在接触猴痘之前接种JYNNEOS可能预防眼部并发症,强调了接种疫苗以预防严重后遗症的重要性,特别是对于弱势群体。