| Literature DB >> 32013784 |
M Jeremiah Matson1,2, Daniel S Chertow3,4, Vincent J Munster1.
Abstract
The average time required to detect an Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak following spillover of Ebola virus (EBOV) to a primary human case has remained essentially unchanged for over 40 years, with some of the longest delays in detection occurring in recent decades. In this review, our aim was to examine the relationship between delays in detection of EVD and the duration and size of outbreaks, and we report that longer delays are associated with longer and larger EVD outbreaks. Historically, EVD outbreaks have typically been comprised of less than 100 cases (median = 60) and have lasted less than 4 months (median = 118 days). The ongoing outbreak in Democratic Republic of the Congo, together with the 2013-2016 west Africa outbreak, are stark outliers amidst these trends and had two of the longest delays in detection on record. While significant progress has been made in the development of EVD countermeasures, implementation during EVD outbreaks is problematic. Thus, EVD surveillance must be improved by the broad deployment of modern diagnostic tools, as prompt recognition of EVD has the potential to stem early transmission and ultimately limit the duration and size of outbreaks.Entities:
Keywords: DRC; Democratic Republic of the Congo; EBOV; EVD; Ebola; Ebola virus disease; hemorrhagic fever; west Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013784 PMCID: PMC7034085 DOI: 10.1080/22221751.2020.1722036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Microbes Infect ISSN: 2222-1751 Impact factor: 7.163
Figure 1.Chronology for all Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreaks. The primary case results from zoonotic spillover and leads to a period of undetected transmission. It is typically determined retrospectively with epidemiological investigations. The index case is the first case to be recognized and marks the official beginning of an outbreak. The final case includes the 42-day observation period. Colours around numbers indicate the following groupings of outbreaks by spillover date: 1976–2012, west Africa (2013), 2014–2018, and ongoing DRC (2018). Locations in parentheses are reported outbreak spillover locations. *For the 1977 DRC (Bonduni) outbreak, the primary case, index case, and final case are the same.
Figure 2.Location and spread of all currently described outbreaks of Ebola virus disease. Zoonotic spillover location per outbreak is indicated by circles with numbers. Numbers inside circles represent the order of the 17 spillovers from 1976-present correspond to Figures 1. For the 2001–2002 Gabon/Republic of Congo outbreak, which had multiple spillovers suspected, only the first spillover location is indicated. *Primary transmission zone; outbreaks 1, 6, 7, and 13 had distant case spread that is not shown in this figure; see Table 1.
EVD outbreaks with transmission and/or case(s) treated >150 km beyond primary transmission zone.
| Outbreak origin | Location(s) of cases | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| 1976 Democratic Republic of the Congo (Yambuku) | Democratic Republic of the Congo [ | Healthcare workers transported from Yambuku |
| 1996–1997 Gabon (Booue) | Gabon [ | Patients from Booue; subsequent transmission |
| South Africa [ | Healthcare workers from Libreville; one nosocomial case | |
| 2001–2002 Gabon/Republic of Congo (Mekambo/Mbomo) | Gabon [ | No epidemiological links to concurrent outbreak in northern Gabon/Republic of Congo |
| 2013–2016 Guinea (Meliandou) | Nigeria [ | Traveller from Liberia, subsequent transmission |
| United States [ | Seven medical evacuations; first Dallas case was a traveller from Liberia that resulted in two nosocomial transmission twice; New York City case was a healthcare worker returning from Guinea | |
| Mali [ | Two introductions by travellers from Guinea; subsequent transmission | |
| United Kingdom [ | Two medical evacuations; Glasgow case was a returning healthcare worker | |
| Spain [ | Two medical evacuations; one nosocomial case | |
| Italy [ | One medical evacuation; one returning healthcare worker | |
| Germany [ | All medical evacuations | |
| France [ | Medical evacuations | |
| Norway [ | Medical evacuation | |
| Netherlands [ | Medical evacuation | |
| Switzerland [ | Medical evacuation | |
| Senegal [ | Traveller from Guinea |
Figure 3.Transmission of Ebola virus (EBOV) in Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreaks compared to virus transmission in other zoonotic viral hemorrhagic fevers. EVD outbreaks usually result from exclusively human-to-human transmission following a single zoonotic spillover to a primary EVD case. Outbreaks of other zoonotic viral hemorrhagic fevers are often characterized by sustained spillover from a reservoir/intermediate host and limited human-to-human transmission. *Other filovirus diseases (e.g. Marburg virus disease) follow a similar pattern to EVD.
Figure 4.Median Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak metrics and correlations of outbreak duration and size to the initial period of undetected transmission. (A) Median time elapsed (dashed line) from primary case to index case and total days with interquartile range (bars) for all EVD outbreaks. (B) Median cases (dashed line) with interquartile range (bars) for all EVD outbreaks. (C) Correlation of time elapsed from suspected primary case to index case to outbreak duration for all EVD outbreaks. (D) Correlation of time elapsed from suspected primary case to index case to total cases for all EVD outbreaks.
Figure 5.Cases and vaccinations for west Africa and the ongoing DRC Ebola virus disease outbreaks, and overall case fatality rate (CFR) for all EVD outbreaks. (A) Total cases (suspected, probable, confirmed) are included for the 2013–2016 west Africa Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak and the ongoing EVD outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and plotted by week. For vaccinations in west Africa, all vaccine platforms that were utilized are included; in the current DRC outbreak, Merck's V920 (rVSVΔG-ZEBOV-GP) accounts for most vaccinations; as of 24 December 2019, 2938 doses of the Johnson & Johnson Ad26.ZEBOV/MVA-BN-Filo have been administered. Beginning dates represented are 26 December 2013 and 30 April 2018 for the west Africa outbreak and the ongoing DRC outbreak, respectively. (B) Comparison of CFR for EVD cases during the following periods: 1976–2012, west Africa (2013–2016), 2014–2018, and the ongoing outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (2018-present). For west Africa, basic care is that which patients received in Ebola treatment units; advanced care is that which patients received when treated in the US or Europe. Grey and orange checkered colouring indicate that the CFR for the west Africa outbreak range from the naïve calculated 40% to recent corrected estimates of 63% [19] and 83% [44]. Numbers above bars indicate total number of cases represented. *As of 24 December 2019.