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Baker, M., & Hanage, B.
. The hantavirus outbreak is the warning the world needs to improve pandemic preparedness. Public Health Expert Briefing. https://www.phcc.org.nz/briefing/hantavirus-outbreak-warning-world-needs-improve-pandemic-preparedness

Vancouver style

Baker M, Hanage B. The hantavirus outbreak is the warning the world needs to improve pandemic preparedness. Public Health Expert Briefing. . https://www.phcc.org.nz/briefing/hantavirus-outbreak-warning-world-needs-improve-pandemic-preparedness

Summary 

The current hantavirus outbreak is a warning about how a lethal zoonotic virus can emerge unexpectedly and spread internationally through modern travel, amplified in this case by a cruise ship. The Andes virus has several concerning features, including person-to-person transmission, a high fatality risk, and a long incubation period that allowed infected travellers to disperse widely. Fortunately, the outbreak appears to have been contained because the virus spreads relatively inefficiently between people and because coordinated national and international public health measures, supported by the World Health Organization (WHO), were effective. 

There are important implications for Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ). NZ should support international pandemic coordination by backing the International Health Regulations amendments and the Pandemic Agreement. It should also strengthen pandemic preparedness, including surveillance and response capacity, while investing in research and prevention of zoonotic spillover linked to climate disruption, land-use change, biodiversity loss, and human encroachment into wildlife habitats.

The latest case of a Canadian passenger testing positive shows the hantavirus outbreak isn’t over yet. We can probably expect more cases given the long incubation period of this infection.

More than 120 passengers from the stricken cruise ship MV Hondius are now being monitored in their home regions, including five Australians and a New Zealander who will remain in quarantine for three weeks in a facility near Perth.

But while caution is still needed, the outbreak is likely to be contained and provides a vivid reminder of the importance of a globally coordinated response to such pandemic threats.

The parallels with the start of the Covid pandemic are obvious. The Andes hantavirus shares a number of frightening features that have understandably raised fears across the globe.

It originated from an animal-human spillover, it can spread from person to person, and a cruise ship had an amplifying effect.

Its ability for animal-to-human (zoonotic) transmission from its natural rodent reservoir to unsuspecting tourists makes the hantavirus an unpredictable threat.

The animal-human spillover capability has been observed with multiple hantavirus species1 that occasionally infect people across the Americas, Europe and Asia. What distinguishes the Andes virus is its ability for person-to-person transmission.2 This is a critical feature needed to start a pandemic.

Its other alarming characteristics are the extremely high case fatality risk of 21–36%2 and its long incubation period (median 18 days, range of 7–39 days).3 The latter allows cases to disperse widely before becoming ill and requires a lengthy period of quarantine for contacts.

Why this will not be the next pandemic

The World Health Organization’s (WHO) rapid international response and the hantavirus’ transmission dynamics are important factors in preventing the outbreak from becoming a global pandemic.

Unlike COVID, the Andes virus was already known to scientists and public health authorities.

While it can spread from person-to-person, the importance of such transmission remains uncertain according to a recent systematic review.4 Transmission is also concentrated around the time a person develops symptoms,5 which rapidly get worse and effectively reduce further contacts and opportunities for spread.

For a significant outbreak of a virus like this, it needs to get lucky. If an infected person is attending a large gathering at the point they become infectious, they can transmit to multiple people in a “superspreading event”.

A 2018 Andes hantavirus outbreak was seeded by a symptomatic person attending a party6 with around 100 guests, five of whom became infected. Something similar can be expected from an unwittingly infectious person in the confined environment of a cruise ship.

In stark contrast with Covid, mild or even asymptomatic infections are rare and the course of illness is quite rapid once symptoms develop. That leaves a narrow window for onward transmission.

The long incubation period helps with contact tracing for isolation and quarantine. Previous hantavirus outbreaks have been eliminated through these simple public health measures.6

The rapid response coordinated by the WHO, using the International Health Regulations framework, was also critical for containment.

Key implications for improving health security

While this outbreak will likely be eliminated, there are still too many gaps in global pandemic prevention, preparedness and response measures.

Probably the single most important action is to reinforce the critical role of the WHO in leading the multilateral cooperation central to global pandemic prevention and control. As its Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus reminded policy makers, viruses don’t care about policies or borders.

Supporting the roll-out of the revised International Health Regulations and the Pandemic Agreement is also critical.

The 2024 revisions to the regulations came into force in September last year. But 11 of the 196 member states rejected the amendments (though these rejections may be withdrawn at any time). The Pandemic Agreement has been adopted by the WHO, but some refinement is needed before it comes into effect.

The recent withdrawal of the United States and Argentina from the WHO and funding cuts by other members present a significant barrier, leaving the world less prepared for the next spillover event.

Other preventive measures

This outbreak is a reminder of the need for precautionary measures to reduce airborne transmission7 of emerging infections with a history of person-to-person transmission, particularly on cruise ships and similar confined settings which can rapidly amplify transmission. Consequently, we need action to improve indoor air quality and the use of respirator-type masks.8

It also highlights the importance of transparent, timely and effective communication, particularly to counter the rush of misinformation that follows outbreaks. Within hours of the first news, social media teemed with baseless claims.

We need renewed research efforts to understand and manage human-driven ecological changes9 – including deforestation, agricultural expansion, wildlife trade and climate change – that raise the risk of viral spillover from animals to people.

The MV Hondius outbreak is a stark warning. It shows how a lethal zoonotic virus can emerge unexpectedly and rapidly disseminate across the globe via travellers.

The next pandemic could start quickly if the world isn’t prepared. We have hopefully “dodged a bullet” with this hantavirus outbreak but may not be so fortunate next time unless we increase political and economic investment in shared global health security.

What this Briefing adds

  • The recent Andes hantavirus outbreak, first detected on a cruise ship, is a vivid example of how dangerous zoonotic diseases with pandemic potential can emerge unexpectedly and spread internationally. 
  • Its containment reflects both the transmission dynamics of this specific virus and coordinated national and international public health measures, supported by the World Health Organization. 
  • It also shows that, despite lessons from Covid-19, major gaps remain in global pandemic preparedness, including inconsistent support for WHO and international legal measures, limited action to reduce respiratory transmission in shared indoor environments, and insufficient research to understand and prevent spillover events. 

Implications for policy and practice

  • To improve global health security, the NZ Government should demonstrate support for the WHO's multilateral coordinating role by reconsidering its rejection of the 2024 amendments to the International Health Regulations and supporting the Pandemic Agreement. 
  • The NZ Government can draw on lessons from this outbreak that highlight the importance of pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response. These lessons could inform its response to the Royal Commission of Inquiry report into Covid-19, which is due in July 2026. 
  • NZ should support greater research and action to address environmental and climate drivers of zoonotic spillover, including biodiversity loss, land-use change, climate disruption, and human encroachment into wildlife habitats.

This article is adapted from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Conversation

Authors details 

Prof Michael Baker, Director, Public Health Communication Centre, and Department of Public Health, Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka, Pōneke | University of Otago, Wellington

Prof Bill Hanage, Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Creative commons

Public Health Expert Briefing (ISSN 2816-1203)

References

  1. Chen R GH, Wang X, Sun M, Ji Y, Tan S, Chen J, Shao J, Liao M. (2023). Zoonotic Hantaviridae with Global Public Health Significance. Viruses, 15(1705). https://doi.org/10.3390/v15081705 
  2. Vial PA, Ferrés M, Vial C, Klingström J, Ahlm C, López R, Le Corre N, & Mertz GJ. (2023). Hantavirus in humans: a review of clinical aspects and management. The Lancet Infectious Diseases, 23(9), e371–e382. https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1016/S1473-3099(23)00128-7 
  3. Vial P, Valdivieso F, Mertz G, Castillo C, Belmar E, Delgado I, Tapia M, & Ferrés M. (2006). Incubation Period of Hantavirus Cardiopulmonary Syndrome. Emerging Infectious Disease journal, 12(8), 1271. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1208.051127 
  4. Toledo J, Haby MM, Reveiz L, Sosa Leon L, Angerami R, & Aldighieri S. (2022). Evidence for Human-to-Human Transmission of Hantavirus: A Systematic Review. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, 226(8), 1362–1371. https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jiab461 
  5. Martinez V, Bellomo C, San Juan J, Pinna D, Forlenza R, Elder M, & Padula P. (2005). Person-to-Person Transmission of Andes Virus. Emerging Infectious Disease journal, 11(12), 1848. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1112.050501 
  6. Martínez VP, Di Paola N, Alonso DO, Pérez-Sautu U, Bellomo CM, Iglesias AA, Coelho RM, López B, Periolo N, Larson PA, Nagle ER, Chitty JA, Pratt CB, Díaz J, Cisterna D, Campos J, Sharma H, Dighero-Kemp B, Biondo E, . . . Palacios G. (2020). "Super-Spreaders" and Person-to-Person Transmission of Andes Virus in Argentina. New England Journal of Medicine, 383(23), 2230–2241. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2009040 
  7. Milton DK, Greenhalgh T, Fisman DN, Kvalsvig A, Morawska L, & Samet JM. (2026). Hantavirus outbreak should reset WHO’s default approach to airborne risk. BMJ, 393, s919. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.s919 
  8. Greenhalgh T, MacIntyre CR, Baker Michael G, Bhattacharjee S, Chughtai Abrar A, Fisman D, Kunasekaran M, Kvalsvig A, Lupton D, Oliver M, Tawfiq E, Ungrin M, & Vipond J. (2024). Masks and respirators for prevention of respiratory infections: a state of the science review. Clinical Microbiology Reviews, 37(2), e00124–00123. https://doi.org/10.1128/cmr.00124-23 
  9. Moirano G, Botta A, Yang M, Mangeruga M, Murray K, & Vineis P. (2024). Land-cover, land-use and human hantavirus infection risk: a systematic review. Pathogens and Global Health, 118(5), 361–375. https://doi.org/10.1080/20477724.2023.2272097 

 

 

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