Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2015)

Ebola Virus Outbreak Investigation, Sierra Leone, September 28–November 11, 2014

  • Hui-Jun Lu,
  • Jun Qian,
  • David Kargbo,
  • Xiao-Guang Zhang,
  • Fan Yang,
  • Yi Hu,
  • Yang Sun,
  • Yu-Xi Cao,
  • Yong-Qiang Deng,
  • Hao-Xiang Su,
  • Foday Dafae,
  • Yu Sun,
  • Cheng-Yu Wang,
  • Wei-Min Nie,
  • Chang-Qing Bai,
  • Zhi-Ping Xia,
  • Kun Liu,
  • Brima Kargbo,
  • George F. Gao,
  • Jia-Fu Jiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2111.150582
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 11
pp. 1921 – 1927

Abstract

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During 2014–2015, an outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) swept across parts of West Africa. The China Mobile Laboratory Testing Team was dispatched to support response efforts; during September 28–November 11, 2014, they conducted PCR testing on samples from 1,635 suspected EVD patients. Of those patients, 50.4% were positive, of whom 84.6% lived within a 3-km zone along main roads connecting rural towns and densely populated cities. The median time from symptom onset to testing was 5 days. At testing, 75.7% of the confirmed patients had fever, and 94.1% reported at least 1 gastrointestinal symptom; all symptoms, except rash and hemorrhage, were more frequent in confirmed than nonconfirmed patients. Virus loads were significantly higher in EVD patients with fever, diarrhea, fatigue, or headache. The case-fatality rate was lower among patients 15–44 years of age and with virus loads of <100,000 RNA copies/mL. These findings are key for optimizing EVD control and treatment measures.

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