CORRECTION: The Global Virus Network Bolsters Multinational Mpox
Response Through Critical Meeting of Key Global Partners
Last week’s meeting marked a prelude
to GVN’s international meeting in Durban, South Africa, September
16-18, 2024
TAMPA, Fla., Aug. 31, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A
correction has been issued for the release disseminated on August
29th. Sten Vermund's full title was corrected to Sten
Vermund, MD, PhD, GVN President and Professor of Yale
University, USA. The complete and corrected release follows.
To mitigate the mpox outbreak, the Global
Virus Network (GVN) is leading a panel of experts to develop
guidelines and streamline testing standards, including
strengthening infrastructure to sequencing and early detection. On
August 22, 2024, the GVN, headquartered at the University of South
Florida, USA, convened a critical mpox discussion online with
leaders from the World Health Organization (WHO), Africa Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), the Foundation for
Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND), the Coalition for Epidemic
Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), major industry partners, renowned
virologists, and public health experts at the forefront of the mpox
outbreak response.
Lorenzo Subissi, PhD, WHO’s Mpox Task Force
lead, advised the group that the current mpox epidemic was
escalated to a grade 3 emergency, requiring a major to maximal WHO
response. He reported that 38% of children infected are under age
10 and noted sustained human-to-human transmission of clade 1b in
Africa.
Mpox is a viral infection that spreads through close contact,
including sexual relations, and causes flu-like symptoms, including
fever, chills, muscle aches, and pus-filled lesions. Mpox is
usually mild but sometimes fatal, mostly in children. The new clade
1b variant is responsible for the rising infections, primarily in
the Democratic Republic of the Congo and identified in Burundi,
Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, and Thailand, as well as reported in the
Central African Republic, the Republic of Congo, and Sweden.
The discussion highlighted the urgent need to enhance diagnostic
capabilities, vaccine development, and global collaboration to
mitigate the impact of the mpox outbreak, particularly in regions
most at risk.
To facilitate recommendations catalyzed by the discussion, the
GVN assembled a subcommittee on point-of-care diagnostics chaired
by Rachel Roper, PhD, Professor of Microbiology
and Immunology at East Carolina University, USA and Co-chair of
GVN’s Mpox Action Committee, Marion Koopmans, DVM,
PhD, Erasmus Medical Center, Netherlands, a GVN Center of
Excellence, and Deborah Williamson, PhD, Professor
of Public Health Microbiology, University of Glasgow, United
Kingdom, a GVN Center of Excellence, and Director of the UK Health
Security Agency. The subcommittee is meeting weekly to develop
global testing and diagnostic standards and generate suggestions
through a collaborative whitepaper addressing issues such as sample
collection, assays, and clinical triage procedures for frontline
workers.
“It’s not just how a sample is transported,” Dr. Roper said,
“but what type of sample is collected. For mpox, each lesion can
have unique viral populations, and we need to have a universal
sample type defined and well documented to aid surveillance.”
During the meeting, Emmanuel Agogo, PhD,
Director of Pandemic Threats at FIND, Switzerland, emphasized the
need for local capacity building: “To effectively combat mpox, we
must empower local health systems and researchers. This will not
only help contain the current outbreaks but also build long-term
resilience against future threats. In particular, the need for
decentralized diagnostic options is critical for surveillance,
access to therapeutics and effective vaccine roll out.”
Maggie L. Bartlett, PhD, Program Director at
the GVN and faculty member at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health, USA, a GVN Center of Excellence, emphasized the
importance of inclusive and equitable strategies: “Our efforts must
reach those in the most affected regions, and we must prioritize
health equity in our response to ensure that no one is left
behind.”
Laurens Liesenborghs, MD, PhD,
Assistant professor of Emerging Infectious Diseases at the
Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM), Belgium, member of ITM’s
multidisciplinary Outbreak Research Team, and member of the GVN
Mpox Action Committee, echoed the call for an innovative approach:
“We cannot be content with the status quo. Our goal is to develop
tools and strategies that are not only effective but also scalable
and sustainable. This is a global challenge that demands a global
response.”
Michael Mina, MD, PhD, Chief Scientific Officer
of eMed, USA, said “Rapid tests and PCR tests are not mutually
exclusive. In fact, we learned during COVID how useful a dual
strategy can be and how these can be incredibly powerful additive
tools in our public health toolbox. We need the big companies to
step it up and develop rapid diagnostics and research funding
incentives from governments to ensure we don’t face the same
fallout with the crash of small companies after the surge.”
Yenew Kebede Tebeje, MD, Head of Division of
Laboratory Systems at Africa CDC advised, “Mpox poses a significant
threat to public health, particularly in regions where health
systems are already stretched thin. To effectively combat this
virus, we must strengthen our surveillance, diagnostic, and
response capabilities across Africa. Our collective efforts must
ensure that we are not only containing the current outbreaks but
also building the resilience needed to face future health
challenges.”
In addition to addressing the immediate response, the meeting
also focused on long-term strategies for pandemic preparedness and
response. The participants discussed the critical role of
partnerships between global organizations like WHO, GVN, Africa
CDC, CEPI and FIND in driving innovation and ensuring that
resources are directed where they are most needed.
Sten Vermund, MD, PhD, GVN President and
Professor of Yale University, USA, said, "The initiatives
originating from the meeting represent part of the GVN effort to
assist in the global effort to combat mpox and other emerging viral
threats. Collaboration is imperative and we are keen that the GVN
help leverage and focus resources and expertise helping to mitigate
the mpox outbreak and plan for future threats.”
GVN’s coalition of the world’s leading virology researchers, who
work together to prevent illness and death from viral disease, will
continue these discussions about the mpox outbreak amid high-level
scientific sessions examining pandemic preparedness and current
threats, including at GVN’s International Annual Scientific
Meeting, “Navigating Virology’s Frontiers in Africa,”
co-hosted by the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South
Africa (CAPRISA), a GVN Center of Excellence, September 16-18,
2024.
Salim Abdool Karim, MB, ChB, director of
CAPRISA and CAPRISA Professor of Global Health at Columbia
University, USA, is chair of the Africa CDC Emergency Consultative
Group and warned that mpox spread is eminent, but with a global
response it can be controlled and stopped. Dr. Karim also said the
outbreak is particularly concerning as it disproportionately
affects young people. He continued, “I look forward to continuing
these discussions at the GVN international meeting in Durban as we
tackle this rising threat, among other pressing global issues,
including COVID-19, scientific misinformation, and pandemic
preparedness.”
During GVN’s international meeting, experts will exchange ideas
on themes including: evading viral evasion; translational virology
and complex co-infections; training the next generation; post-viral
diseases; bats, rats, and other vectors; genetic sequences and
epidemiological insights; cutting-edge diagnostics and
therapeutics; regional responses to disease; perspectives from
agencies; pandemic preparedness; and combating scientific
misinformation.
About the Global Virus Network (GVN)
The GVN is essential and critical in the preparedness, defense,
and first research response to emerging, existing, and unidentified
viruses that pose a clear and present threat to public health.
Working in close coordination with established national and
international institutions, the GVN is a coalition comprised of
eminent human and animal virologists from 80+ Centers of Excellence
and Affiliates in 40+ countries, working collaboratively to train
the next generation, advance knowledge about how to identify and
diagnose pandemic viruses, mitigate and control how such viruses
spread and make us sick, as well as develop drugs, vaccines, and
treatments to combat them. No single institution in the world has
expertise in all viral areas other than the GVN, which brings
together the finest medical virologists to leverage their
individual expertise and coalesce global teams of specialists on
the scientific challenges, issues, and problems posed by pandemic
viruses. The GVN is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization. For more
information, please visit www.gvn.org.