Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Maganga G. D., Kapetshi J., Berthet N., Ilunga B. K., Kabange F., Kingebeni P. M., Mondonge V., Muyembe J. J. T., Bertherat E., Briand S., Cabore J., Epelboin A., Formenty P., Kobinger G., Gonzalez-Angulo L., Labouba I., Manuguerra J. C., Okwo-Bele J. M., Dye C., Leroy Eric. (2014). Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of Congo. New England Journal of Medicine, 371 (22), p. 2083-2091. ISSN 0028-4793.

Titre du document
Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of Congo
Année de publication
2014
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000345580000007
Auteurs
Maganga G. D., Kapetshi J., Berthet N., Ilunga B. K., Kabange F., Kingebeni P. M., Mondonge V., Muyembe J. J. T., Bertherat E., Briand S., Cabore J., Epelboin A., Formenty P., Kobinger G., Gonzalez-Angulo L., Labouba I., Manuguerra J. C., Okwo-Bele J. M., Dye C., Leroy Eric
Source
New England Journal of Medicine, 2014, 371 (22), p. 2083-2091 ISSN 0028-4793
BACKGROUND The seventh reported outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) in the equatorial African country of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) began on July 26, 2014, as another large EVD epidemic continued to spread in West Africa. Simultaneous reports of EVD in equatorial and West Africa raised the question of whether the two outbreaks were linked. METHODS We obtained data from patients in the DRC, using the standard World Health Organization clinical-investigation form for viral hemorrhagic fevers. Patients were classified as having suspected, probable, or confirmed EVD or a non-EVD illness. Blood samples were obtained for polymerase-chain-reaction-based diagnosis, viral isolation, sequencing, and phylogenetic analysis. RESULTS The outbreak began in Inkanamongo village in the vicinity of Boende town in Equateur province and has been confined to that province. A total of 69 suspected, probable, or confirmed cases were reported between July 26 and October 7, 2014, including 8 cases among health care workers, with 49 deaths. As of October 7, there have been approximately six generations of cases of EVD since the outbreak began. The reported weekly case incidence peaked in the weeks of August 17 and 24 and has since fallen sharply. Genome sequencing revealed Ebola virus (EBOV, Zaire species) as the cause of this outbreak. A coding-complete genome sequence of EBOV that was isolated during this outbreak showed 99.2% identity with the most closely related variant from the 1995 outbreak in Kikwit in the DRC and 96.8% identity to EBOV variants that are currently circulating in West Africa. CONCLUSIONS The current EVD outbreak in the DRC has clinical and epidemiologic characteristics that are similar to those of previous EVD outbreaks in equatorial Africa. The causal agent is a local EBOV variant, and this outbreak has a zoonotic origin different from that in the 2014 epidemic in West Africa.
Plan de classement
Santé : généralités [050] ; Entomologie médicale / Parasitologie / Virologie [052]
Description Géographique
REPUBLIQUE DEMOCRATIQUE DU CONGO
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010063106]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010063106
Contact