Molecular Evidence of Sexual Transmission of Ebola Virus.

Journal: The New England Journal Of Medicine
Published:
Abstract

A suspected case of sexual transmission from a male survivor of Ebola virus disease (EVD) to his female partner (the patient in this report) occurred in Liberia in March 2015. Ebola virus (EBOV) genomes assembled from blood samples from the patient and a semen sample from the survivor were consistent with direct transmission. The genomes shared three substitutions that were absent from all other Western African EBOV sequences and that were distinct from the last documented transmission chain in Liberia before this case. Combined with epidemiologic data, the genomic analysis provides evidence of sexual transmission of EBOV and evidence of the persistence of infective EBOV in semen for 179 days or more after the onset of EVD. (Funded by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency and others.).

Authors
Suzanne Mate, Jeffrey Kugelman, Tolbert Nyenswah, Jason Ladner, Michael Wiley, Thierry Cordier Lassalle, Athalia Christie, Gary Schroth, Stephen Gross, Gloria Davies Wayne, Shivam Shinde, Ratnesh Murugan, Sonpon Sieh, Moses Badio, Lawrence Fakoli, Fahn Taweh, Emmie De Wit, Neeltje Van Doremalen, Vincent Munster, James Pettitt, Karla Prieto, Ben Humrighouse, Ute Ströher, Joseph Diclaro, Lisa Hensley, Randal Schoepp, David Safronetz, Joseph Fair, Jens Kuhn, David Blackley, A Laney, Desmond Williams, Terrence Lo, Alex Gasasira, Stuart Nichol, Pierre Formenty, Francis Kateh, Kevin De Cock, Fatorma Bolay, Mariano Sanchez Lockhart, Gustavo Palacios