# A diagnostic void in the Congo Basin: proposing a zoonotic orthopoxvirus as the cause of a hemorrhagic fever outbreak and a call for equitable health security

**Authors:** Tshibambe Nathanael Tshimbombu

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s40249-025-01386-6 · Infectious Diseases of Poverty · 2025-11-21

## TL;DR

A deadly hemorrhagic fever outbreak in the Congo Basin may be caused by a zoonotic orthopoxvirus, linked to poverty-driven human-wildlife interactions.

## Contribution

The paper proposes a zoonotic orthopoxvirus as the cause of a hemorrhagic fever outbreak and emphasizes equitable health security.

## Key findings

- The clinical symptoms suggest a fulminant zoonotic orthopoxvirus infection.
- Socio-ecological pressures like bushmeat consumption and deforestation likely contributed to the spillover event.
- A targeted diagnostic and therapeutic approach is recommended for managing the outbreak.

## Abstract

In February 2025, a fatal outbreak of a hemorrhagic fever-like illness emerged in the Basankusu Health Zone of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), a region where the burdens of poverty and infectious disease intersect. Initial field diagnostics for common filoviruses like Ebola and Marburg returned negative, creating a critical diagnostic void and confronting local health systems with a potential “Disease X.” This opinion piece analyzes the outbreak’s unique clinical and ecological context to advance a specific, actionable hypothesis.

We argue that the presenting clinical syndrome, particularly the unusual combination of hemorrhagic signs with intractable hiccups and dysphagia, is highly consistent with a fulminant zoonotic orthopoxvirus infection. We hypothesize that this spillover event is directly linked to the socio-ecological pressures of poverty, including reliance on bushmeat for protein and accelerated deforestation for subsistence agriculture and charcoal production, which increase human-wildlife contact. Framing the outbreak through this lens shifts the public health paradigm from confronting a complete unknown to managing a new variant of a known threat. This perspective underscores that the poverty-driven exploitation of ecosystems is a primary engine of novel epidemics.

The definitive etiology of the Basankusu outbreak remains unresolved, but the clinical and ecological evidence points toward a potential zoonotic origin consistent with known patterns of pathogen emergence in the Congo Basin. In a setting constrained by limited diagnostic capacity, such evidence-informed approach provides a pragmatic framework for immediate public health action—guiding the deployment of targeted diagnostics (pan-poxvirus PCR), therapeutics (tecovirimat), and vaccines (MVA-BN). Ultimately, preventing future outbreaks of diseases of poverty requires a global commitment to investing in local diagnostic capacity, sustainable development, and equitable health security within high-risk endemic regions like the Congo Basin.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** hemorrhagic fever (MONDO:0018087), Ebola (MONDO:0005737)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Disease X. (MESH:D004194), Marburg (MESH:D008379), hemorrhagic fever (MESH:D006480), hemorrhagic (MESH:D006470), orthopoxvirus infection (MESH:D007239), dysphagia (MESH:D003680), hiccups (MESH:D006606), infectious disease (MESH:D003141), Ebola (MESH:D019142)
- **Chemicals:** MVA (MESH:C051113), tecovirimat (MESH:C505045), BN (MESH:C072598), charcoal (MESH:D002606)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

6 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12636139/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12636139