A total of 18 passengers from the cruise ship hit by a hantavirus outbreak arrived at the University of Nebraska Medical Center (UNMC) in Omaha for quarantine, but a couple was transported to Emory University in Atlanta after one partner developed symptoms, officials said.
Another passenger had previously tested PCR-positive for the virus, and while remaining asymptomatic, was moved to UNMC’s biocontainment unit for monitoring.
The other 15 passengers are in UNMC’s quarantine unit, where they all remain asymptomatic, officials said during a UNMC press briefing on Monday morning. They will continue to be assessed before any decisions are made about their next steps.
Previous reports indicated there were 17 American passengers; an additional passenger who has dual U.S. and U.K. citizenship opted to be repatriated into the U.S., officials said.
Also, of the two people who were transported to Emory, only one was symptomatic; the other was their partner, a UNMC spokesperson told MedPage Today. Brendan Jackson, MD, MPH, the CDC’s acting director of the division of high-consequence pathogens and pathology, said the decision was made to preserve space in Nebraska’s biocontainment unit for others who might need it.
Passengers range in age from their late 20s to late 70s or early 80s, UNMC officials said.
A French national also became symptomatic and tested positive for hantavirus as she was flying from Tenerife, Spain, to Paris after leaving the ship. She was in intensive care in stable condition at a Paris hospital on Monday. French passengers who returned with her on Sunday have tested negative but remain in isolation at the same hospital.
UNMC has the only official national quarantine unit in the U.S., according to John Knox, the principal deputy assistant secretary for preparedness and response at the Administration for Strategic Preparedness & Response (ASPR). It has “extensive expertise in handling special pathogens” and has participated in responses including the 2014 Ebola outbreak and the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The quarantine unit is “much more like a hotel than a patient care space,” set up like a living space with exercise equipment, television, and other comforts, said Angela Hewlett, MD, an infectious disease physician and medical director of the UNMC biocontainment unit.
The passengers will remain there “at least a few days while we do assessments” and then coordinate their next steps, Jackson said. For those who remain asymptomatic, the decision about where to quarantine will rest with them, Jackson said, noting they “have the option to stay here for the entire 42-day period if that’s the safest and most effective option for them.”
Jackson noted that 42 days is “the maximum incubation seen with Andes virus“ and “most people who end up infected with this virus will develop symptoms much sooner than that, so it’s a conservative timeframe.”
Assessments for whether people can safely quarantine at home include questions about whether passengers can contact their state public health department for testing if needed, and that they have access to appropriate levels of care near their home. If they do return home, they will be escorted under appropriate circumstances from start point to endpoint, officials said.
Hewlett noted that being able to access critical care is essential with hantavirus disease, which can involve rapid decompensation.
“We do think that being able to provide aggressive measures to people can change outcomes, and that’s the importance of being close to this type of care … should they need it,” she said.
Michael Wadman, MD, an emergency physician and medical director of Nebraska’s quarantine unit, echoed that it offers vast benefits to passengers who opt for it: “the best teams, the best policies and procedures, the best training, and the experience we’ve had over the years to provide this care in a safe manner — that track record is one of the things that sets us apart.”
“If I was exposed to this and I had the option to stay in a quarantine unit proximate to that care, I would definitely take that, because you’re putting yourself in a position, if you were to turn positive, to take advantage of all those things that will give you the best chance of survival,” he said.
Both UNMC and Emory University are among the country’s 13 Regional Emerging Special Pathogen Treatment Centers (RESPTCs), which ASPR established “over the years to prepare for high-consequence infectious disease outbreaks, with trained personnel ready to safely manage situations like this,” Knox said.
Jackson added that the seven American passengers who previously disembarked the ship on St. Helena, a remote island off the western coast of Africa, on April 24 — as first reported by MedPage Today — have all been contacted and state health departments are monitoring them on a daily basis, conducting symptom and temperature checks. They live in Arizona, California, Georgia, Texas, and Virginia.
In the early morning hours on Saturday, the CDC issued a Health Alert Network health advisory to healthcare professionals about being aware of the potential for imported cases of hantavirus disease in connection with the outbreak.
When asked whether he can guarantee that no Americans will catch the virus from passengers who have returned to the U.S., Jackson said, “There are no guarantees in life.”
“We are putting as many measures in place as possible to ensure that people are safe and healthy, and that we keep the community safe and healthy as well,” he said.
Here is some info on prophylaxis and treatment. Itr seems prophylaxis is reasonably well developed, and all those exposed on the ship should be offered prophylactic drugs. Effective treatment may be a different kettle of fish—but the concept regarding treatment is just to keep the patient alive (with whatever it takes: ventilator or oxygen, ECMO, etc.) until the immune system fights off the virus, when full recovery is possible.
This is a 2019 summary on Hantavirus therapeutics from Fort Detrick, paid for by NIH:
Conclusions
The number of hantavirus disease cases each year warrants the development of medical countermeasures to combat infection from these viruses. However, the number of cases each year do not necessitate a widespread vaccination strategy outside of endemic areas except in the case of military conducting operations in these areas. Therefore, it is imperative to work towards the goal of a vaccine and an antiviral that could be used individually or in combination. An antiviral, such as a polyclonal antibody therapy, would provide instant immunity while vaccination could provide long-lasting immunity. Vaccination would also prevent the spread of ANDV, the only hantavirus with demonstrated person-to-person transmission. Antiviral treatment and vaccination is a strategy currently used for rabies virus infection that could be applied to hantavirus infections. The timing of treatment intervention presents a challenge for hantavirus disease, especially cases of HPS. Animal models have repeatedly shown that antivirals are not effective if administered after the onset of viremia. The prodrome phase can be difficult to differentiate from other febrile illnesses, hampering early intervention efforts. Continued work is required to determine if there are early host responses that can be used to support a hantavirus diagnosis. Additionally, the lack of an HFRS disease model that faithfully recapitulates the salient features of human HFRS disease is hampering medical countermeasure development efforts. Current infection models have utility for testing vaccines and antivirals in which sterile immunity can be used as an output. The unavailability of a model that can be used to evaluate antivirals targeting specific aspects of pathogenesis, postexposure prophylactics, or therapeutics is a major shortcoming of the field. The advancement of several vaccines into clinical trials is promising for the future use of these vaccines as licensed products or in emergency use. There are several path-to-licensure issues that must be overcome, reviewed in [95]. These include limited site for Phase III efficacy trials, lack of significant government and industry investments, and current limitations to the use of “animal rule.” Continued research efforts are necessary to propel more antiviral products towards clinical trials. Viruses 2019, 11, 610 9 of 14 The need for these medical countermeasures perpetuates as outbreaks around the world continue to occur.
Funding: This review is supported by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R01AI32313. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. Opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are ours and are not necessarily endorsed by the U.S. Army or the Department of Defense.
Below is a 2007 summary of antibody therapy experiments in animals, with good results. There is a strange coincidence. Gene hackman’s wife, pianist Betsy Arakawa, is said to have died from an untreated hantavirus infection. One of the authors of a study on antibody treatment for hantavirus was named Arikawa.
Finally, regarding whether hantaviruses are considered potential biowarfare agents, the answer is YES. Here is an article about them coauthored by Marion Koopmans, who was one of the participants in the Feb. 1, 2020 Fauci and Farrar phone call to concoct a cover story for COVID.
And apparently hantaviruses have, at times, been included in the Select Agent list, even though they are not currently listed. And Fort Detrick has been working on them for decades.
Keeping the immune system strong is a lifelong task, but it doesn’t necessarily figure on everyone’s agenda.
When I was in Egypt in 1987, I travelled on feluccas for a couple of weeks with about 30 other people, nobody was ill although the boatmen prepared the food and their hygiene was doubtful to say the least.
However, even then we were hearing stories about people on cruise boats falling ill; in fact everyone I knew who had been on one of those boats had a story to tell.
Now with the boats getting larger and larger, cruising isn’t something that only the richest people can afford.
“This attempted pandemic is the dullest so far with nothing noteworthy to talk about.
The script needs completely rewriting or the whole pantomime will die,
and the profits of the impresarios, who grew rich on DieQuick19 will crash.” Well said….
According to the Beeb last week then, the so called “virus” is actually breathing in dry rat droppings it seems. Not a good idea at all I’d imagine
The Telegraph was more honest, calling it the rat virus ship rather than Hantavirus ship everywhere else
“Pantovirus” seems far more appropriate
Of course modern ships never have rats on board do they? Ha ha
In fact they’ve never isolated any virus, ever
They changed the meaning of the word “isolation” to pretend that has been achieved. Some geezer got a Nobel for that in the 1950’s
Although his idea of isolation was the reaction achieved when adding the “virus” to a toxic drug cocktail. So not isolated at all in the real meaning of the word
Whenever they say “isolated” they are relying on nobody noticing that is was NOT isolated in reality. After all he got a Nobel didn’t he and that process is lilywhite isn’t it? And if you believe that then I’ve got a bridge to sell you