Research and analysis

Mpox (monkeypox) outbreak: epidemiological overview, 7 March 2024

Updated 4 April 2024

This epidemiological overview provides an update to the number of confirmed and highly probable mpox cases in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

Mpox is a zoonotic infection, caused by the monkeypox virus, that occurs mostly in West and Central Africa. Prior to 2022, cases diagnosed in the UK had been either imported from countries where mpox is endemic or contacts with documented epidemiological links to imported cases. Between 2018 and 2021, there had been 7 cases of mpox in the UK. Of these, 4 were imported, 2 were cases in household contacts, and one was a case in a health care worker involved in the care of an imported case. There was no documented community transmission in previous outbreaks.

Current epidemiological situation up to 29 February 2024

Detection of cases of mpox infection, acquired within the UK, were confirmed in England from 6 May 2022. The outbreak has mainly been in gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men without documented history of travel to endemic countries.

Suspected mpox samples that are positive using a mpox polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test are classified as confirmed cases. Samples which are positive using an orthopox PCR test are classified as highly probable cases. Orthopox is the group of viruses which includes mpox. The counts below combine both of these categories.

Up to 31 December 2022 there were 3,732 confirmed and highly probable mpox cases reported in the UK. Of these, 3,553 were in England, 34 were in Northern Ireland, 97 were in Scotland and 48 were in Wales.

In 2023 and 2024 (up to 29 February 2024) there have been a total of 160 cases of mpox reported in the UK. Of these, 153 were in England (68 cases were presumed to have acquired mpox in the UK, 58 were acquired outside the UK and 27 are awaiting classification), 3 were in Scotland (2 were an imported case acquired outside the UK and one was presumed to have acquired mpox in the UK), one was in Wales (an imported case acquired outside the UK), and 3 were in Northern Ireland (one was presumed to have acquired mpox in the UK and 2 are awaiting classification).

Figure 1 shows the monthly number of cases in England in 2023 and 2024, where there were between one and 31 cases per month, compared to the monthly high of 1,339 cases in July 2022.

Figure 1. Number of confirmed and highly probable mpox cases in England, by month in 2023 and 2024

Table 1. Number of confirmed and highly probable mpox cases by UK nation of residence, 6 May 2022 to 29 February 2024*

UK nation Cases reported in 2022 ** Cases presumed acquired in the UK in 2023 and 2024 Cases presumed acquired outside the UK (imported) in 2023 and 2024 Cases awaiting classification in 2023 and 2024 Total (2022 to 2024)
England 3,553 68 58 27 3,706
Northern Ireland 34 1 0 2 37
Scotland 97 1 2 0 100
Wales 48 0 1 0 49
Total 3,732 70 61 29 3,892

*Based on data extracted on 5 March 2024.

**Figures for 2022 start from 6 May 2022 and combine UK acquired and imported cases.

Data sources

Mpox surveillance data in England is based on mpox and orthopox virus test results from the Rare and Imported Pathogens Laboratory (RIPL), which is the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) mpox reference laboratory, and other UK laboratories with mpox and orthopox testing.

Counts of confirmed cases in Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland are submitted to UKHSA by Public Health Wales, Public Health Agency Northern Ireland, and Public Health Scotland respectively.

Information about this publication

These figures are used for official reporting of mpox confirmed case counts in the UK.

England counts may differ from those published in the Notifications of infectious diseases (NOIDs) causative agents weekly report. This is due to differences in timings of when the data is compiled, and differences in processing of duplicate data (for example, if a person has tested more than once but insufficient information is provided to identify them).

As mpox continues to be a notifiable infection, please refer to UKHSA’s NOIDs reports for weekly updates (but not cumulative totals) on laboratory-notified mpox cases in England.

While data cleaning is carried out routinely, corrections can be applied between reports, such as updates to patient information and the removal of quality assurance samples from laboratory surveillance systems.

Additional resources

Mpox outbreak: technical briefings

Mpox: case definitions

Mpox contact tracing guidance: classification of contacts and advice for vaccination and follow-up