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Ebola survivors: life afterwards

14 Jan 2017 | By INSERM (Newsroom) | Immunology, inflammation, infectiology and microbiology

photo-postebogui

© Livia Saavadra REA / For Waha International: ophthalmic consultation as part of the PostEbogui programme in Guinea.

The long-term clinical and social sequelae following survival of Ebola infection are unknown. In November 2014, i.e. less than a year after the start of the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, Inserm, in partnership with the French National Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD) and the Department of Infectious Diseases at Donka University Hospital, Conakry in Guinea, organised medical follow-up of people who survived infection by the virus as part of a large research cohort. 802 individuals (adults and children) were included in the PostEbogui cohort[1] from March 2015.

Results of follow-up show that on average one year after their initial period in hospital, 3 in 4 survivors still report health problems. 40% suffer from tiredness or fever, but also from muscular (38%) and abdominal pain (22%), vision disorders that are sometimes serious and can lead to blindness (18%), and depression (17%). One quarter of survivors also claim to be victims of stigmatisation. As regards persistence of the virus in the semen, this is true: it can be found up to 18 months after the acute phase. This study has led the researchers to define what they now call the post-Ebola syndrome. This work is published in the journal The Lancet Infectious Diseases.

There are few data regarding people who have survived Ebola epidemics in the past. The reason: the too-small number of survivors and the inadequate structures for performing research in a state of emergency. The last epidemic of Ebola in West Africa was so large that it led both to an unprecedented number of deaths, and a number of survivors that had never been attained in the past (17,000 survivors). Given this unprecedented situation, basic medical and research questions emerged. What long-term complications could be caused by the virus? What might be the psychosocial consequences for the survivors? Is there a risk of delayed reactivation of the virus? How long does it persist in the body and what is the possibility of sexual transmission?

In order to answer all these questions, Inserm joined forces with the Guinean health authorities to organise follow-up of those who survived the infection. Researchers at the International Joint Unit “Translational Research on HIV and Infectious Diseases” (TransVIHMI; Inserm/IRD) established a follow-up cohort of people who had survived Ebola virus infection in Guinea, the PostEbogui cohort, in March 2015. 802 individuals (of the 1,270 reported survivors of the epidemic in Guinea) entered this multidisciplinary study, an average of one year after their initial infection.

They received biological, psychological and sociological follow-up, and their viral load was measured 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months after their inclusion in the cohort. Datas of this study refer to a follow-up until July 2016. Follow-up of immunological responses will be performed on a segment of the people, in partnership with the researchers of the Vaccine Research Institute (Inserm/ANRS).

45% of the participants are men. The median age is 28 years (range 1-79 years). One in five patients is a child under 18 years.

 

One year after their initial period in hospital, three quarters of survivors continue to report clinical symptoms.

Clinical data

40% of patients in the cohort suffer from so-called symptoms of a general nature (tiredness/fever/anorexia). Vision disorders affect 18% of patients (conjunctivitis; visual deficits [up to blindness] and eye pain). 38% of patients suffer from musculoskeletal pain (joint pain and muscular weakness), 35% complain of headaches, 2% of deafness and 22% of abdominal pain.

“Fortunately, these symptoms tend to become less frequent over time, and they tend to become less severe the longer the period after the acute phase of the infection,” explains Eric Delaporte, director of the International Joint Unit “Translational Research on HIV and Infectious Diseases” (TransVIHMI).

Compared with adults, children have more episodes of fever in the long term, but less musculoskeletal pain and fewer eye problems than adults.

Biological and virological data

26% of survivors suffer from anaemia. Ebola virus is still present in the semen of 5% of men 1-18 months after infection. These results were published in greater detail in The Journal of Infectious Diseases in May 2016.

Psychological and sociological data

The risk of depression is increased in survivors. Moreover, 26% of patients claim to be stigmatised after contracting the disease.

“The results of this first large cohort allow us to better characterise what we now call the post-Ebola syndrome. Medical complications persist or appear after the acute phase of the infection, and are not negligible. They justify medical follow-up of patients with Ebola for at least 18 months following infection,” concludes Eric Delaporte.

[1] This operational research programme, “[Re]vivre après Ebola en Guinée” (Living after Ebola in Guinea), led by Inserm, is developed by the International Joint Unit TransVIHMI (UMI 233 IRD / U1175 Inserm), in partnership in Guinea with several departments of Donka University Hospital, INSP, Macenta, N’Zérékoré and Forécariah Hospitals, the ALIMA association and the Socio-Anthropological Analysis Laboratory of Guinea (LASAG) of the University of Sonfonia, and in France with the Biology of Viral Emerging Infections Unit at Institut Pasteur Lyon, the Inserm U955 Immunomonitoring Platform, and the Inserm U980 Laboratory of Human Genetics of Infectious Diseases.
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Researcher Contact
Eric Delaporte
Directeur de l'Unité 1175 "Recherche translationnelle sur le VIH et les maladies infectieuses "transvihmi"
Email :  rf.dri@etropaled.cire Tel : 04 67 41 62 97
Sources
Multidisciplinary assessment of post Ebola sequelae: an observational cohort study in Guinea (Postebogui) Jean-François Etard*, Mamadou Saliou Sow*, Sandrine Leroy*, Abdoulaye Touré*, BernardTaverne, Alpha Kabinet Keita, Philippe Msellati, N’Fally Magassouba, Sylvain Baize, HervéRaoul, Suzanne Izard, Cécé Kpamou, Laura March, Ibrahima Savane, Moumié Barry, Eric Delaporte, and Postebogui study group *Equally contributed IRD UMI 233-INSERM U1175-Montpellier University, Montpellier, France (JF Etard MD PhD, Abdoulaye Touré PharmD PhD, Sandrine Leroy MD PhD, B Taverne MD PhD, PMsellati MD PhD, AK Keita MD PhD, S Izard, C Kapmou, L March, E Delaporte MD PhD, Postebogui Study Group Donka National Hospital, Conakry, Guinea (M S Sow MD, M Barry MD, NF Magassouba PhD) Conakry University, Department of Public Health, Conakry, Guinea (A Touré, PharmD PhD) Episcience, London, UK (S Leroy MD PhD) Pasteur Institute/Unit of Biology of Emerging Viral Infections, International Center for Infectiology Research, INSERM, CNRS, Lyon I University, Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, France (S Baize, PhD) Laboratoire P4 Inserm-Jean Mérieux, US003 Inserm, 69365 Lyon, France (H Raoul,PhD) Macenta Prefectoral Hospital, Macenta, Guinea (I Savane MD) The Lancet Infectious Diseases
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