Emerging Infectious Diseases (Dec 2003)

Risk Factors for Marburg Hemorrhagic Fever, Democratic Republic of the Congo

  • Daniel G. Bausch,
  • Matthias Borchert,
  • Thomas Grein,
  • Cathy Roth,
  • Robert Swanepoel,
  • Modeste L. Libande,
  • Antoine Talarmin,
  • Eric Bertherat,
  • Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum,
  • Ben Tugume,
  • Robert Colebunders,
  • Kader M. Kondé,
  • Patricia Pirard,
  • Loku L. Olinda,
  • Guénaël R. Rodier,
  • Patricia Campbell,
  • Oyewale Tomori,
  • Thomas G. Ksiazek,
  • Pierre E. Rollin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid0912.030355
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 12
pp. 1531 – 1537

Abstract

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We conducted two antibody surveys to assess risk factors for Marburg hemorrhagic fever in an area of confirmed Marburg virus transmission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Questionnaires were administered and serum samples tested for Marburg-specific antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Fifteen (2%) of 912 participants in a general village cross-sectional antibody survey were positive for Marburg immunoglobulin G antibody. Thirteen (87%) of these 15 were men who worked in the local gold mines. Working as a miner (odds ratio [OR] 13.9, 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.1 to 62.1) and receiving injections (OR 7.4, 95% CI 1.6 to 33.2) were associated with a positive antibody result. All 103 participants in a targeted antibody survey of healthcare workers were antibody negative. Primary transmission of Marburg virus to humans likely occurred via exposure to a still unidentified reservoir in the local mines. Secondary transmission appears to be less common with Marburg virus than with Ebola virus, the other known filovirus.

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