#19,198
When the Bundibugyo Ebola virus outbreak in the DRC was announced nearly 4 weeks ago, there were already 246 suspected cases and 65 deaths, which suggested the outbreak had been brewing - unrecognized - for several months.
Which isn't to say it went unnoticed, for in the 3 months prior there were a number of reports from the region of `suspected' hemorrhagic fever cases that were either never confirmed, or followed up on.
Admittedly, outbreaks in the DRC are notoriously difficult to manage, as much of the region is a conflict zone, is plagued by a wide variety of infectious diseases, and has only limited public health capacity. Also, the Ebola PCR test commonly used in the region was Zaire-specific, and would not have detected the much rarer Bundibugyo virus.
But gaps in surveillance and reporting extend far beyond Central Africa.
As we've discussed often (see Flying Blind in the Viral Storm), over the past few years we've seen a noticeable decline in surveillance and reporting of infectious diseases around the world.
In 2005 the World Health Organization adopted updated IHR (International Health Regulations) which – among other things - required countries to develop mandated surveillance and testing systems, and to report certain types of disease outbreaks and public health events to WHO.
A report 3 years ago (see Lancet Preprint: National Surveillance for Novel Diseases - A Systematic Analysis of 195 Countries), found many member nations still lack the capability to fully investigate cases.
And of course, some nations - for political or economic reasons - simply choose to ignore the IHR whenever convenient, since there are few tangible penalties for doing so (see From Here To Impunity).
Today we've a fascinating look at early signals - and missed opportunities - in the DRC going back to early March of this year.
While not a long report, I've only posted the Abstract. Follow the link to read the full report.
Regional Signals Preceding the 2026 Bundibugyo Virus Disease Outbreak
Nahid Bhadelia1,2 ∙ Isaac Gikandi1 ∙ Britta Lassmann1,2
Highlights
- Bundibugyo virus circulated undetected for months prior to outbreak declaration.
- Four earlier regional hemorrhagic fever clusters flagged by open surveillance are unresolved.
- These clusters warrant urgent reanalysis due to concern for regional spread.
Abstract
Background
The May 2026 Bundibugyo virus disease (BVD) outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo was declared a Public Health Emergency of International Concern after substantial undetected community transmission. We describe regional surveillance signals detected by the Biothreats Emergence, Analysis, and Communications Network (BEACON), our open access event based surveillance program, in the weeks preceding outbreak declaration.
Methods
We reviewed BEACON reports of VHF-compatible illness clusters detected in the transboundary DRC-Uganda-Burundi-South Sudan region during March–April 2026, prior to the May 15 laboratory confirmation of BDBV.
Results
BEACON detected four temporally proximal VHF-compatible illness signals:
- (1) March 9, North Kivu Province—suspected Ebola case under investigation with unresolved laboratory results;
- (2) March 10, Kasaï Province—fatal hemorrhagic illness with secondary cases and negative Ebola PCR;
- (3) March 30, Burundi—35-case undiagnosed cluster near the DRC border with 5 deaths, negative testing for major filoviruses and >200 pathogens, pending metagenomic sequencing;
- (4) April 22, South Sudan—three suspected VHF cases with negative initial testing.
All four signals shared a similar diagnostic phenotype: VHF-compatible presentation, mobilization of investigation teams, negative initial testing, and no publicly reported confirmed etiology. None were formally reported to have been resolved.
Conclusions
Our detection of four unresolved VHF signals preceding the confirmed BDBV outbreak highlights gaps in formal follow-up mechanisms for negative cases and fragmented regional diagnostic coordination. In light of confirmed BDBV circulation and Africa CDC's identification of 10 countries at high risk for spread, these preceding signals warrant urgent retrospective investigation and laboratory.
When the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the Bundibugyo disease outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda a Public Health Emergency of International Concern on May 17, 2026, the epidemiology was already telling us we were late [1,2]. Eight of the first thirteen samples submitted to the Institut National de Recherche Biomédicale (INRB) returned positive for Bundibugyo virus.
By May 23, 746 suspected cases, 83 confirmed cases, 176 suspected deaths, and 9 confirmed deaths have been reported in DRC’s Ituri, North Kivu and South Kivu provinces, with spread to multiple urban centers. Uganda has 5 confirmed cases with direct epidemiological links to DRC [3].
There remains significant uncertainty about the true number of infections and how far the virus has spread. Healthcare worker deaths in clinical contexts consistent with viral hemorrhagic fever (VHF) had been reported in multiple sites. The official investigation was anchored, in retrospect, to the death of a nurse in Bunia on April 24, 2026, and to funeral-related exposures that followed. Recent data shows the outbreak began well before this date.(Continue . . . )