# Marburg virus kills 15 in Rwanda's first-ever confirmed outbreak, with 66 cases concentrated among healthcare workers at Kigali hospitals
> Rwanda confirmed its first Marburg virus disease outbreak on September 27, 2024, with 66 confirmed cases and 15 deaths by the time WHO declared the outbreak over on December 20, 2024; 80% of cases were healthcare workers at King Faisal Hospital and Rwanda Military Hospital in Kigali, where the index case had worked in an intensive care unit; WHO and Rwanda's rapid containment set a new benchmark for haemorrhagic fever outbreak response in Africa

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2024-09-27 · heads: 生活如何改变, 长远之局 · 7 takes · 5 lenses · 4 regions

## Summary

Rwanda declared its first Marburg virus disease outbreak on September 27, 2024, after laboratory tests confirmed that deaths among healthcare workers at Kigali's King Faisal Hospital were caused by Marburg virus, a rare and highly lethal haemorrhagic fever in the same family as Ebola. The outbreak reached a total of 66 confirmed cases and 15 deaths (case fatality rate approximately 23%) before WHO declared it over on December 20, 2024. Approximately 80% of confirmed cases were healthcare workers, a pattern consistent with nosocomial amplification from an unrecognised initial case. Rwandan authorities, WHO, and Africa CDC deployed contact tracers to identify more than 4,000 contacts, and an experimental Sabin Institute monovalent Marburg vaccine was administered to exposed healthcare workers under compassionate use. Egyptian fruit bats at a cave site near Kigali were identified as the probable reservoir.

## The split

Rwanda's government and WHO agreed to publish real-time case data, a transparency that stood in contrast to several prior African haemorrhagic fever outbreaks and was credited by WHO as enabling faster international deployment of diagnostic and response teams. Rwanda's health minister attributed the relatively low case fatality rate (23%, compared to the 50-88% range in historical Marburg outbreaks) in part to early intensive care access for confirmed cases. Global health researchers used the outbreak to advocate for accelerated regulatory approval of Marburg vaccines, noting that two candidates (Sabin Institute and IAVI) had shown promising Phase I safety data but lacked the efficacy data needed for full licensure. The outbreak also triggered a debate about bat cave tourism and bushmeat markets as outbreak ignition vectors.

## By the numbers

- 66: confirmed Marburg cases in Rwanda's 2024 outbreak
- 15: deaths (case fatality rate ~23%)
- ~80%: share of confirmed cases who were healthcare workers
- 4,000+: contacts traced during the response
- December 20, 2024: date WHO declared the outbreak over
- 83 days: duration of the active outbreak (September 27 to December 20, 2024)
- 2: candidate Marburg vaccines in Phase I/II trials (Sabin, IAVI) at time of outbreak

## Why it matters

Rwanda's 2024 Marburg outbreak was only the third confirmed outbreak in Africa in the 21st century and the first in a country with a modern hospital system and strong public health infrastructure. The Rwanda response is now studied as a model for nosocomial haemorrhagic fever containment: rapid identification, ring vaccination with an experimental product, and aggressive contact tracing. The [Marburg](/zh/entity/marburg) virus remains on WHO's priority list of pathogens with pandemic potential, and the Rwanda event renewed pressure for emergency licensing pathways for Marburg vaccines before the next outbreak occurs in a less-equipped country.

## What to watch

- Regulatory timeline for full approval of the Sabin Institute and IAVI Marburg vaccine candidates
- Whether Egypt or Tanzania, where Egyptian fruit bat colonies are large, report spillover events
- Post-outbreak longitudinal studies of surviving Rwandan healthcare workers for persistence of Marburg antibodies and long-term sequelae
- WHO's updated Marburg preparedness guidance and stockpiling recommendations following the 2024 Rwanda response review

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### UN global health agency; primary alert and technical situation report for the Rwanda Marburg outbreak
- **WHO (World Health Organization)** (International, en) — WHO's Disease Outbreak News confirmed Rwanda's first Marburg virus disease outbreak on September 27, 2024, with cases concentrated in healthcare workers at two Kigali hospitals. The index case was identified as a staff member in an intensive care unit who had died before the pathogen was identified, resulting in nosocomial spread among colleagues. WHO activated its emergency response protocols and deployed a rapid response team.
  > "WHO confirms Rwanda's first Marburg outbreak, September 27, 2024; index case a hospital worker whose contacts were exposed before pathogen identification."
  Source: https://www.who.int/emergencies/disease-outbreak-news/item/2024-DON545

### Global wire service; immediate reporting on the initial declaration and case counts
- **Reuters** (United Kingdom, en) — Reuters reported Rwanda's Marburg outbreak declaration, noting that 26 cases and 6 deaths had been confirmed as of the first announcement. Rwandan health minister Dr. Sabin Nsanzimana said the outbreak had originated among healthcare workers and that all confirmed cases were connected to two hospitals in Kigali. Rwanda activated its Integrated Disease Surveillance and Response system and began contact tracing.
  > "Rwanda declares Marburg outbreak September 27, 2024; 26 initial cases, 6 deaths; all linked to two Kigali hospitals."
  Source: https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/rwanda-declares-marburg-virus-outbreak-2024-09-27/

### University of Minnesota infectious disease research centre; detailed technical tracking of case counts, exposure chains, and containment measures
- **CIDRAP (Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy)** (United States, en) — CIDRAP tracked the Rwanda Marburg outbreak from declaration through containment, documenting the rise to 66 confirmed cases and 15 deaths, the identification of Egyptian fruit bats (Rousettus aegyptiacus) as the probable reservoir, and the use of an experimental Sabin Institute monovalent vaccine on exposed healthcare workers under a compassionate use protocol. The outbreak was declared over on December 20, 2024.
  > "CIDRAP documented Rwanda Marburg: final count 66 cases, 15 deaths; experimental Sabin vaccine used on exposed healthcare workers under compassionate use."
  Source: https://www.cidrap.umn.edu/marburg/rwanda-declares-marburg-outbreak-26-confirmed-cases-6-deaths

### Africa Centres for Disease Control; continental public health authority's response coordination and technical briefings for member states
- **Africa CDC** (Africa, en) — Africa CDC coordinated regional surveillance to prevent spread beyond Rwanda's borders, activating enhanced entry screening at borders with Uganda, Tanzania, DRC, and Burundi. Africa CDC's incident management team deployed to Kigali to support contact tracing, given Rwanda's role as a regional travel hub. The agency noted that Rwanda's rapid detection and transparent reporting enabled faster containment than previous Marburg events in other African countries.
  > "Africa CDC: enhanced border screening activated with Uganda, Tanzania, DRC, Burundi; Rwanda's transparent reporting enabled faster containment."
  Source: https://africacdc.org/disease-outbreak/marburg-virus-disease-outbreak-in-rwanda/

### unlabelled
- **The Lancet (Marburg response commentary)** (United Kingdom, en) — 
  Source: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(24)00698-0/fulltext
- **MSF (Medecins Sans Frontieres) Rwanda Marburg** (International, en) — 
  Source: https://www.msf.org/rwanda-marburg-virus-outbreak
- **Wikipedia Marburg virus Rwanda 2024** (International, en) — 
  Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2024_Marburg_virus_outbreak_in_Rwanda

## Across the graph
- Entities: Marburg

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Canonical: https://rbtfl.xyz/zh/n/marburg-rwanda-2024