<p>Ebola survivors can relapse and trigger outbreaks at least five years after infection, and long-term follow-up of former patients is needed to prevent devastating flare-ups, according to new research.</p>.<p>Scientists already knew Ebola could lie dormant in survivors, who test negative because the virus is in tissue rather than circulating in the blood.</p>.<p>But analysis of an outbreak this year in Guinea, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, found these "virus reservoirs" can awaken and cause new infections and transmission years on.</p>.<p>To trace the source of the Guinea outbreak, which involved 16 confirmed cases, 12 of whom died, researchers analysed the genomes of samples from several patients.</p>.<p>Ebola outbreaks are usually thought to result from the virus "spilling" from an animal host to a human.</p>.<p>But the analysis showed the Guinea strain was virtually identical to that from a 2013-16 wave.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/guinea-declares-end-to-ebola-outbreak-that-killed-12-999233.html" target="_blank">Guinea declares end to Ebola outbreak that killed 12</a></strong></p>.<p>If the virus had been circulating actively in the community since then, it would have accumulated a certain number of mutations as it spread.</p>.<p>Instead, the 2021 virus had just 12 changes, "far fewer than would be expected... during six years of sustained human-to-human transmission".</p>.<p>That strongly suggests the source was reactivated virus that had lain dormant in a survivor, said Alpha Keita, a researcher at the University of Montpellier who led the study.</p>.<p>"This is the longest known time between the declared end of an epidemic and a viral resurgence," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"It's a new paradigm: the possibility that transmission from an individual infected during a previous epidemic could be the source of a new outbreak."</p>.<p>How and why dormant Ebola virus suddenly awakens and sickens a person remains something of a mystery, though there are some tantalising clues.</p>.<p>Sometimes a spike in Ebola antibodies can be detected in survivors at a given time -- a possible sign that the body is responding to a resurgent virus.</p>.<p>Around two-thirds of Ebola survivors have high antibody levels even five years after infection, but "the question to pose is what happens if there's a resurgence in the people whose immunity has dropped", said Keita.</p>.<p>The study's findings have "considerable implications for public health and care of survivors of Ebola", said Robert F. Garry of Tulane University's School of Medicine.</p>.<p>"Humans can now be added to the list of intermediate hosts that can serve as long-term Ebola virus 'reservoirs' and trigger new outbreaks," he wrote in a review commissioned by Nature.</p>.<p>He sees the need to prioritise healthcare workers for vaccination and monitor Ebola survivors for signs of a flare-up.</p>.<p>And Keita wants a rethink of the term "Ebola survivor" to include not only those who battled through symptoms but also those who may have been infected without becoming ill.</p>.<p>Even asymptomatic individuals "could be the starting point" for an outbreak, he warned.</p>.<p>"We need a real, long-term follow-up protocol for former Ebola patients and their contacts so we can catch resurgence in previously infected people in time."</p>.<p>He cautions though that follow-up must be done cautiously to avoid ostracisation of survivors, a point echoed by Trudie Lang, director of Oxford University's Global Health Network.</p>.<p>"These people are considered heroes by some for surviving," she said.</p>.<p>"Yet (they) could also be stigmatised and excluded if there is a fear of these individuals presenting a risk."</p>.<p>Lang, who was not involved in the study, called it "important new evidence," and a reminder of the need to support research on threats other than Covid-19.</p>.<p>Keita said the research paves the way for various additional study, including on what causes viral resurgence and the possibility of eradicating Ebola reservoirs in survivors.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>
<p>Ebola survivors can relapse and trigger outbreaks at least five years after infection, and long-term follow-up of former patients is needed to prevent devastating flare-ups, according to new research.</p>.<p>Scientists already knew Ebola could lie dormant in survivors, who test negative because the virus is in tissue rather than circulating in the blood.</p>.<p>But analysis of an outbreak this year in Guinea, published Wednesday in the journal Nature, found these "virus reservoirs" can awaken and cause new infections and transmission years on.</p>.<p>To trace the source of the Guinea outbreak, which involved 16 confirmed cases, 12 of whom died, researchers analysed the genomes of samples from several patients.</p>.<p>Ebola outbreaks are usually thought to result from the virus "spilling" from an animal host to a human.</p>.<p>But the analysis showed the Guinea strain was virtually identical to that from a 2013-16 wave.</p>.<p><strong>Also read: <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/guinea-declares-end-to-ebola-outbreak-that-killed-12-999233.html" target="_blank">Guinea declares end to Ebola outbreak that killed 12</a></strong></p>.<p>If the virus had been circulating actively in the community since then, it would have accumulated a certain number of mutations as it spread.</p>.<p>Instead, the 2021 virus had just 12 changes, "far fewer than would be expected... during six years of sustained human-to-human transmission".</p>.<p>That strongly suggests the source was reactivated virus that had lain dormant in a survivor, said Alpha Keita, a researcher at the University of Montpellier who led the study.</p>.<p>"This is the longest known time between the declared end of an epidemic and a viral resurgence," he told AFP.</p>.<p>"It's a new paradigm: the possibility that transmission from an individual infected during a previous epidemic could be the source of a new outbreak."</p>.<p>How and why dormant Ebola virus suddenly awakens and sickens a person remains something of a mystery, though there are some tantalising clues.</p>.<p>Sometimes a spike in Ebola antibodies can be detected in survivors at a given time -- a possible sign that the body is responding to a resurgent virus.</p>.<p>Around two-thirds of Ebola survivors have high antibody levels even five years after infection, but "the question to pose is what happens if there's a resurgence in the people whose immunity has dropped", said Keita.</p>.<p>The study's findings have "considerable implications for public health and care of survivors of Ebola", said Robert F. Garry of Tulane University's School of Medicine.</p>.<p>"Humans can now be added to the list of intermediate hosts that can serve as long-term Ebola virus 'reservoirs' and trigger new outbreaks," he wrote in a review commissioned by Nature.</p>.<p>He sees the need to prioritise healthcare workers for vaccination and monitor Ebola survivors for signs of a flare-up.</p>.<p>And Keita wants a rethink of the term "Ebola survivor" to include not only those who battled through symptoms but also those who may have been infected without becoming ill.</p>.<p>Even asymptomatic individuals "could be the starting point" for an outbreak, he warned.</p>.<p>"We need a real, long-term follow-up protocol for former Ebola patients and their contacts so we can catch resurgence in previously infected people in time."</p>.<p>He cautions though that follow-up must be done cautiously to avoid ostracisation of survivors, a point echoed by Trudie Lang, director of Oxford University's Global Health Network.</p>.<p>"These people are considered heroes by some for surviving," she said.</p>.<p>"Yet (they) could also be stigmatised and excluded if there is a fear of these individuals presenting a risk."</p>.<p>Lang, who was not involved in the study, called it "important new evidence," and a reminder of the need to support research on threats other than Covid-19.</p>.<p>Keita said the research paves the way for various additional study, including on what causes viral resurgence and the possibility of eradicating Ebola reservoirs in survivors.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest videos from <i data-stringify-type="italic">DH</i>:</strong></p>