NAIROBI - A suspected outbreak of the Marburg virus in northwest Tanzania has infected nine people, killing eight of them, the World Health Organization has said, weeks after an outbreak of the disease was declared over in neighbouring Rwanda.
The viral hemorrhagic fever has a fatality rate as high as 88 percent, and is from the same virus family as the one responsible for Ebola, which is transmitted to people from fruit bats which are endemic to that part of East Africa.
ALSO READ: Global disease resurgence in 2024 shows rising health threat
The WHO said it received reliable reports of suspected cases in the Kagera region of Tanzania on Jan 10, with symptoms of headache, high fever, back pain, diarrhoea, vomiting blood, muscle weakness and finally external bleeding.
Samples from two patients were awaiting testing at Tanzania's national laboratory for confirmation of the outbreak, WHO said in a statement on Tuesday.
READ MORE: Rwanda's Marburg cases decline but mpox spreading in Africa, health officials say
The patients' contacts, including healthcare workers, have been identified and were being followed up, WHO reported.
The outbreak in Rwanda, which shares a border with Tanzania's Kagera region, infected 66 people and killed 15 before it was declared over on Dec 20.
ALSO READ: Rwanda begins Marburg vaccinations to curb deadly outbreak
Marburg virus can spread between people through direct contact or via blood and other bodily fluids of infected people, including contaminated bedding or clothing.
An outbreak in the Kagera region in March 2023 killed six people and lasted for nearly two months.