Genomic epidemiology of the 2025 mpox epidemic in Sierra Leone.

Nature medicine
Authors
Abstract

Mpox is a re-emerging zoonotic disease caused by MPXV, which has led to outbreaks across multiple countries in recent years. Sierra Leone reported its first mpox case in 8 years in January 2025, rapidly becoming the epicenter of a continental outbreak with more than 5,000 confirmed cases by August, a surge with unknown origins, timings and drivers. Phylodynamic analyses using 338 genomes generated from 14 districts suggests that the outbreak was caused by lineage G.1 (A.2.2.1) which descended from lineages circulating in Nigeria. Here we observed a strong APOBEC3 mutational enrichment, consistent with sustained human transmission that circulated undetected for ~3 months before the first confirmed case in January 2025. The Western Area Urban district served as the primary hub for nationwide spread and persistence, as well as multiple international export events. We further estimated that the true epidemic size was nearly double official case counts, highlighting substantial surveillance gaps. These findings underscore the urgent need for strengthened genomic and diagnostic surveillance systems across West Africa to pre-empt epidemics.

Year of Publication
2026
Journal
Nature medicine
Date Published
05/2026
ISSN
1546-170X
DOI
10.1038/s41591-026-04385-8
PubMed ID
42120729
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