For the first time in Britain, a case of the new deadly strain of monkeypox which has ripped through several African countries has been detected in London, reports the Daily Mail.
The patient was in holiday in an African country currently experiencing an outbreak earlier this month.
They developed flu like symptoms on October 21 then developed a rash three days later.
Seeking medical advice the case was flagged with The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) as potentially being the new mpox strain of concern, dubbed 'clade 1b'.
Laboratory testing confirmed the patient have the disease and they are currently being treated by specialist staff at the Royal Free Hospital in London. No further details on the patient's condition have been revealed.
UKHSA said they are currently tracing 'less than 10' people who are believed to have been in close contact with the patient during the potential period he was infectious.
Officials currently do not suspect the patient was infectious on the flight back from the unnamed African country, they contracted the disease from.
How the patient got the new strain of mpox, which can kill about one in 20 adults it infects, is currently unknown, though skin-to-skin contact is suspected.
UKHSA said they are currently in conversation with their counterparts in the African nation for contact tracing purposes there and thus are not revealing which exact nation it is.
Officials say they still consider the threat clade 1b poses to the public as 'low'.
Professor Susan Hopkins, Chief Medical Adviser at UKHSA, said, “It is thanks to our surveillance that we have been able to detect this virus.”
“The risk to the UK population remains low, and we are working rapidly to trace close contacts and reduce the risk of any potential spread.”
“In accordance with established protocols, investigations are underway to learn how the individual acquired the infection and to assess whether there are any further associated cases.”
Dr Jake Dunning, consultant in infectious diseases at the Royal Free, added, “Our unit is run by a highly-trained and experienced team of doctors, nurses, therapists and laboratory staff and is specifically designed to ensure the safety of staff and other patients.”
The rest of the NHS hospital is operating as normal.
Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting added, “The overall risk to the UK population currently remains low and the government is working alongside UKHSA and the NHS to protect the public and prevent transmission.”
Steve Russell, NHS national director for vaccination and screening, also said, “The NHS is fully prepared to respond to the first confirmed case of this clade of mpox.”
Clade 1b has swept through central Africa killing at least 1,000 people, since the outbreak began.
Countries like the Democratic Republic of Congo have been hit especially hard with cases also spotted in Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya.
Britain's case now means it joins countries such as Sweden, Thailand, India and Germany in having cases outside of Africa.
Clade 1b is considered far deadlier than the clade 2 strain which spread globally in 2022 and primarily hit gay and bisexual men.
The strain is estimated to kill about 5 per cent of adults who contract it, but the mortality rate rises to one in 10 in children.
In comparison, Clade 2 only killed roughly about one in every 500 people that caught it.
However, experts say fatality rates of clade 1b from central Africa are unlikely to be replicated in developed nations like the UK due to better access to higher quality healthcare.
Bd-Pratidin English/ Afsar Munna