PLoS Medicine (Dec 2015)

Use of Viremia to Evaluate the Baseline Case Fatality Ratio of Ebola Virus Disease and Inform Treatment Studies: A Retrospective Cohort Study.

  • Oumar Faye,
  • Alessio Andronico,
  • Ousmane Faye,
  • Henrik Salje,
  • Pierre-Yves Boëlle,
  • N'Faly Magassouba,
  • Elhadj Ibrahima Bah,
  • Lamine Koivogui,
  • Boubacar Diallo,
  • Alpha Amadou Diallo,
  • Sakoba Keita,
  • Mandy Kader Konde,
  • Robert Fowler,
  • Gamou Fall,
  • Simon Cauchemez,
  • Amadou Alpha Sall

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001908
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 12
p. e1001908

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundThe case fatality ratio (CFR) of Ebola virus disease (EVD) can vary over time and space for reasons that are not fully understood. This makes it difficult to define the baseline CFRs needed to evaluate treatments in the absence of randomized controls. Here, we investigate whether viremia in EVD patients may be used to evaluate baseline EVD CFRs.Methods and findingsWe analyzed the laboratory and epidemiological records of patients with EVD confirmed by reverse transcription PCR hospitalized in the Conakry area, Guinea, between 1 March 2014 and 28 February 2015. We used viremia and other variables to model the CFR. Data for 699 EVD patients were analyzed. In the week following symptom onset, mean viremia remained stable, and the CFR increased with viremia, V, from 21% (95% CI 16%-27%) for low viremia (V ConclusionsViremia in EVD patients was a strong predictor of death that partly explained variations in CFR in the study population. This study provides baseline CFRs by viremia group, which allow appropriate adjustment when estimating efficacy in treatment studies. In randomized controlled trials, stratifying analysis on viremia groups could reduce sample size requirements by 25%. We hypothesize that monitoring the viremia of hospitalized patients may inform the ability of surveillance systems to detect EVD patients from the different severity strata.