The Citizen (Gauteng)

New muti for ebola victims

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Democratic Republic of Congo has started using the experiment­al mAb114 ebola treatment to counter the latest flare-up of the virus, health officials said, the first time it has been deployed against an active outbreak.

Forty-two people are believed to have died from the haemorrhag­ic fever in Congo’s 10th ebola outbreak since it was discovered in the 1970s.

In all, there have been 66 cases to date, including 39 confirmed and 27 probable, the health ministry said on Tuesday evening, an increase of nine confirmed cases since Monday.

The outbreak has spread from its epicentre in North Kivu province to the neighbouri­ng Ituri province after an infected person returned home, Congo’s health ministry said, complicati­ng containmen­t in a region beset by militia violence.

Ebola, which causes fever, vomiting and diarrhoea, finds a natural home in Congo’s vast equatorial forests. Continuing flare-ups have made the central African country a testing ground for new treatments against a virus that between 2013 and 2016 killed more than 11 300 people in a west African epidemic.

In an outbreak in western Congo which began in April and was declared over in July, an experiment­al vaccine manufactur­ed by Merck & Co Inc was given to 3 300 people and was considered central in containing the virus when it reached a city.

The mAb114 treatment was developed in the United States by the National Institutes of Health using the antibodies of the survivor of an Ebola outbreak in the western Congolese city of Kikwit in 1995.

World Health Organisati­on director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told a news conference in Geneva that medics were already treating five patients with mAb114 and that he had been informed they were doing well.

“We will use it as much as needed,” Tedros said. “But use of the molecules is decided by doctor and patient consent.”

Several other experiment­al treatments have arrived in the regional hub of Beni and are awaiting approval from an ethics committee, the health ministry said.

Separately, authoritie­s have vaccinated more than 200 health workers and contacts of ebola patients. He said the risk of internatio­nal spread was currently considered low even though it poses a high regional risk because of its proximity to the Ugandan border, which is only about 100km away.

The response is taking place against the backdrop of insecurity caused by dozens of militia groups who regularly kill and kidnap civilians in the region.

“Before I went there I was really worried because of the different nature of the ebola outbreak in DRC,” Tedros said. “But after the visit I am actually more worried because of what we have observed there first hand.”

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