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Adrenal Cortex Hormones/tu [Therapeutic Use] Adult Animals Antibodies, Monoclonal/tu [Therapeutic Use] Antiviral Agents/tu [Therapeutic Use] Camelus Child Clinical Laboratory Techniques *Coronavirus Infections/ep [Epidemiology] Coronavirus Infections/pc [Prevention & Control] Coronavirus Infections/tm [Transmission] Critical Care *Cross Infection/ep [Epidemiology] Cross Infection/pc [Prevention & Control] Cross Infection/tm [Transmission] *Epidemics Female Global Health Humans Immunity, Innate/ph [Physiology] Immunocompromised Host Infection Control *Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus Plasma Pregnancy Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/ep [Epidemiology] Pregnancy Complications, Infectious/pc [Prevention & Control] Risk Factors Travel Viral Vaccines Zoonoses/tm [Transmission] ; 2020
Article in English | 03 28 | ID: covidwho-828636

ABSTRACT

The Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is a lethal zoonotic pathogen that was first identified in humans in Saudi Arabia and Jordan in 2012. Intermittent sporadic cases, community clusters, and nosocomial outbreaks of MERS-CoV continue to occur. Between April 2012 and December 2019, 2499 laboratory-confirmed cases of MERS-CoV infection, including 858 deaths (34.3% mortality) were reported from 27 countries to WHO, the majority of which were reported by Saudi Arabia (2106 cases, 780 deaths). Large outbreaks of human-to-human transmission have occurred, the largest in Riyadh and Jeddah in 2014 and in South Korea in 2015. MERS-CoV remains a high-threat pathogen identified by WHO as a priority pathogen because it causes severe disease that has a high mortality rate, epidemic potential, and no medical countermeasures. This Seminar provides an update on the current knowledge and perspectives on MERS epidemiology, virology, mode of transmission, pathogenesis, diagnosis, clinical features, management, infection control, development of new therapeutics and vaccines, and highlights unanswered questions and priorities for research, improved management, and prevention.

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