Guidance

Monkeypox: case definitions

This guidance describes case definitions to inform testing and reporting of suspected monkeypox cases.

Possible case

A person with a febrile prodrome compatible with monkeypox infection where there is known prior contact with a confirmed case in the 21 days before symptom onset.

Or, a person with an illness where the clinician has a high suspicion of monkeypox (for example, this may include prodrome or atypical presentations with exposure histories deemed high risk by the clinician, or classical rash without risk factors).

Febrile prodrome consists of fever ≥ 38°C, chills, headache, exhaustion, muscle aches (myalgia), joint pain (arthralgia), backache, and swollen lymph nodes (lymphadenopathy).

Probable case

A person with aan monkeypoxunexplained compatiblerash vesicular-pustularon rashany pluspart atof leasttheir body plus one or more classical symptom or symptoms of themonkeypox followinginfection¥ epidemiologicalsince criteria:15 March 2022 and either:

  • exposurehas an epidemiological link to a confirmed or probable case of monkeypox in the 21 days before symptom onset

or

  • historyreported ofa travel history to anWest area where monkeypox is endemic, or whereCentral thereAfrica is a current outbreak in the 21 days before symptom onset (currently West and Central Africa, Spain, Portugal and USA)

or

  • is a gay, bisexual andor other menman who havehas sex with men (GBMSM)

¥Acute illness with fever (>38.5°C), intense headaches, myalgia, arthralgia, back pain, lymphadenopathy.

Actions on a possible or probable case

Test for monkeypox (using designated testing pathway).

Undertake additional contemporaneous tests to rule out alternative diagnoses if clinically appropriate and if not done already.

If admission of patient required for clinical reasons, admit to single room isolation at negative or neutral pressure at local hospital site with RPE PPE (with appropriate IPC arrangements).

Or, if patient not requiring admission for clinical reasons: self-isolation at home (based on assessment by the clinician and following UKHSA guidance).

Or, if patient not requiring admission for clinical reasons but self-isolation at home is not possible for social or medical reasons following clinician assessment: isolation in single room at negative or neutral pressure at local hospital site with RPE PPE pending test result (prioritise probable cases).

Confirmed case

A person with a laboratory confirmed monkeypox infection (monkeypox PCR positive).

Action on a confirmed case

Transfer to HCID unit.

Further information

Additional monkeypox resources are available on GOV.UK, including guidance on vaccination and contact tracing.



Published 20 May 2022
Last updated 2124 May 2022 + show all updates
  1. Updated probable case information.

  2. Added links to additional monkeypox guidance.

  3. First published.