New research from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) offers some hope, highlighting two treatments that could help bring Ebola outbreak under control.
More than 1,500 people have been reported to have died after a second outbreak of Ebola started in August 2018 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). So, this is definitely good news for the health community and for sub-Sahara Africa in particular, where the disease is mostly concentrated.
The study, published in the The Lancet Infectious Diseases, finds that two experimental Ebola treatments—Gilead Sciences’ antiviral drug remdesivir, and antibodies included in a Mapp Biopharmaceutical cocktail known as ZMapp—were shown in a lab to slow the viral strain found in the DRC, potentially offering an effective treatment to those who become infected with the hemorrhagic fever.
There is no known cure for Ebola. There are some treatments available, but all were “developed to fight Ebola viruses from previous outbreaks,” lead study author and CDC microbiologist Laura McMullan says in a statement. “It’s vitally important to make sure existing treatments work against the virus that’s making people sick now.”
CDC researchers isolated and recreated the specific viral strain circulating in the DRC, which is known as the Ituri strain, and studied its activity in human cells in a secure laboratory. This allowed them to compare the Ituri strain to past forms of Ebola, and to test treatments with a high degree of specificity. They also confirmed that diagnostic tests currently in use in the DRC can accurately detect Ebola.




