Kuwait Times

New Congo Ebola cases as medics prepare treatment

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GOMA: Four new cases of Ebola virus have been confirmed in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, the health ministry said, as authoritie­s prepare to deploy an experiment­al treatment. The latest confirmed cases near the town of Mangina in Congo’s North Kivu province bring the total for the current outbreak to 21, the ministry said in a statement late on Friday.

Two more people - one near Mangina and another in the city of Beni - died of Ebola, the ministry said. In all, the hemorrhagi­c fever is believed to have killed 38 people, although several of these cases have not been confirmed. Authoritie­s this week began vaccinatin­g health workers and people who had contact with confirmed cases. The experiment­al vaccine, manufactur­ed by Merck, proved effective against an outbreak in western Congo that ended late last month.

Officials are also ready to use an experiment­al treatment called mAB114 on Ebola patients for the first time, Steve Ahuka, a virologist at the National Institute for Biomedical Research (INRB) in the capital Kinshasa, told Reuters. The treatment was developed in the United States using the antibodies of the survivor of an Ebola outbreak in the western Congolese city of Kikwit in 1995 and was 100 percent effective when tested on monkeys.

“It’s experiment­al. So we are following the protocol. It has been submitted to the ethical committee and the ethical committee gave its okay,” Ahuka said, adding it could be used within days. He said other experiment­al treatments, including ZMapp, a similar antibody drug made by Mapp Biopharmac­euticals in San Diego, could also be used.

Ebola, which causes fever, vomiting and diarrhoea, is spread through direct contact with body fluids. It killed more than 11,000 people during the largest-ever outbreak in West Africa from 2013-16. Authoritie­s in Congo, which has experience­d 10 outbreaks since 1976, have been more successful in containing it. But the current flare-up poses fresh challenges as it is in a part of Congo stalked by myriad militia groups that regularly battle one another and kill and kidnap civilians. So far, however, the disease has not touched so-called “red zones” where security risks would severely limit access for health workers.

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