Hantavirus Global Situational Briefing — May 10, 2026

MV Hondius docks at Tenerife Sunday morning as CDC draws sharp expert criticism for its belated Level 3 EOC activation, while WHO leads the international response without US partnership. Argentina's 2025–26 HPS season hits 101 confirmed cases and 32 deaths — the worst since 2018 — with Buenos Aires province now leading national case burden. A KLM flight attendant and two suspected Spain cases are the first potential secondary transmissions outside the ship. Indonesia's Seoul virus cluster spans 9 provinces with 23 confirmed cases. New research identifies the hantavirus L protein N-terminal domain as an antiviral target; Moderna confirms a preclinical mRNA vaccine program with Korea University dating to 2023.

MV Hondius reaches Tenerife as CDC draws sharp criticism; Argentina records worst HPS season since 2018; Indonesia Seoul virus spreads across 9 provinces; new research opens antiviral target.

AI-generated illustration: expedition cruise ship arriving at a Canary Islands port with emergency medical vehicles on the pier
AI-generated illustration: expedition cruise ship arriving at a Canary Islands port with emergency medical vehicles on the pier

統計カードを読み込んでいます…

The ship arrives — and the institutions diverge

At approximately 06:00 local time on Sunday, May 10, MV Hondius docked at the industrial port of Granadilla de Abona in Tenerife. The WHO Director-General flew ahead of it 1.
"I know you are worried," Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus wrote to the island's residents on May 9. "This is not another COVID-19." He praised Spain's Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez for agreeing to receive the vessel as "an act of solidarity and moral duty" — a phrasing that acknowledged, without naming, the diplomatic pressure Spain absorbed when neighboring countries declined to authorize docking. 1
That the WHO Director-General was the one writing reassuring letters to the Spanish public tells the story of this outbreak's institutional dynamics. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, by contrast, activated its Emergency Operations Center only on Thursday, May 8 — five days after WHO issued its first Disease Outbreak Notice (DON-599 on May 3) and three days after a second confirmed fatality had been recorded 2. The CDC's first Health Alert Network advisory, HAN #00528, went to US physicians the same day 2.
CDC classified the outbreak at Level 3 — the lowest of the agency's three EOC activation tiers 3. That designation is appropriate for a 38%-CFR cluster of eight cases aboard a ship that had already scattered passengers to at least 15 countries. At a Saturday media briefing — conducted under rules set by RFK Jr.'s office that barred reporters from naming CDC speakers 4 — agency officials outlined a repatriation plan: a US government charter flight to Offutt Air Force Base in Nebraska, followed by quarantine at the University of Nebraska Medical Center's national quarantine facility 3.
Outside observers were unsparing. Lawrence Gostin of Georgetown University said, "The CDC is not even a player. I've never seen that before." Jennifer Nuzzo of Brown University called CDC's communications "empty and vapid." Dr. Jeanne Marrazzo of the Infectious Diseases Society of America described the outbreak as a "sentinel event" for US public health preparedness — an event that tests whether systems designed for routine surveillance can scale when genuinely needed 4.
The structural backdrop is not subtle. The United States withdrew from WHO in January 2025. That withdrawal means the agency leading the international hantavirus response — WHO — has no formal US government partner at the table. CDC's hollowed-out ship sanitation program, which critics noted this week had been one of the early targets of post-2025 agency restructuring, is now absent at precisely the moment it would have been most useful.
Spain's military hospital at Gómez Ulla in Madrid is receiving 14 Spanish nationals under a court-enforced mandatory confinement order issued this week. Four US states — Arizona, California, Virginia, and Georgia — are monitoring returning passengers, all currently asymptomatic 3. The ECDC assessment of very low risk to Europe's general population remains unchanged, grounded in the absence of Oligoryzomys longicaudatus — the Andes virus reservoir rodent — from the European continent 5.
Two suspected hantavirus cases were reported in Spain on May 9, unlinked to the ship — no official confirmation as of this briefing 6. A KLM flight attendant was hospitalized in Amsterdam with suspected hantavirus after contact with a passenger who had been aboard MV Hondius; test results remain pending 4. If confirmed, that would be the first documented Andes virus infection associated with a commercial flight.

Healthcare workers in PPE during public health outbreak response
Healthcare workers in PPE during public health outbreak response

Americas: Argentina's worst HPS season in eight years

The MV Hondius cluster has dominated international attention, but the epidemiological context in which it is occurring deserves equal weight.
Argentina's Ministry of Health reported 101 confirmed HPS cases for the 2025–26 season — running since epidemiological week 27 of 2025 (approximately June 30, 2025). These figures exclude the ship cases entirely. Thirty-two people have died. The case fatality rate has risen 10 percentage points compared to the prior season, and the 101-case total represents the highest season count since 2018. The prior year's comparable period showed 57 cases — the current season has nearly doubled that figure 7.
The geographic composition has shifted. Buenos Aires province now leads national case counts for 2026 year-to-date with 42 confirmed cases, displacing the historically dominant Patagonian provinces 7. That geographic reorientation — from Patagonia toward the central agricultural region — is consistent with the climate-driven range expansion of O. longicaudatus that multiple Argentine and Chilean field biologists have been tracking. ANLIS-Malbrán is deploying rodent capture teams to Ushuaia and across the Patagonian south to sample the rodent reservoir 8.

Index case — the Dutch couple's itinerary and what it resolves

Argentina's May 6–7 investigation report reconstructed the five-month itinerary of the Dutch couple identified as the probable source of MV Hondius cases 8:
  • November 27, 2025: Arrived Argentina
  • January 7, 2026: Crossed to Chile after 40 days of overland car travel
  • January 31: Re-entered Argentina via Neuquén after 24 days in Chile
  • February 12: Returned to Chile (12 days)
  • Late February: Crossed into Mendoza; drove 20 days to Misiones
  • March 13: Crossed into Uruguay
  • March 27: Re-entered Argentina
  • April 1: Departed Ushuaia aboard MV Hondius
This itinerary cuts through the core endemic belt for Andes virus: Neuquén, Río Negro, and Chubut — the three provinces whose circulating strains match the genome sequenced from Case 7 (the Swiss patient whose full genome was published on virological.org on May 7) 9.
The Tierra del Fuego provincial epidemiology director publicly disputed that Ushuaia was the exposure site. The couple spent only three days there (March 29–April 1), and Tierra del Fuego has no recorded history of Andes virus circulation. "The timeline doesn't add up for them to have contracted in Ushuaia," the director told Argentine media 8. The sequencing data currently points toward Chubut, Río Negro, or Neuquén as the most probable exposure zone — the three central Patagonian provinces the couple passed through in late January and February, during the peak of Argentine autumn when O. longicaudatus density typically remains elevated.
A notable intradomiciliary cluster in Cerro Centinela, Chubut — three co-residing family members infected with Andes virus in sequential symptom onset — illustrates that the current season's transmission is not limited to travelers or unusual exposures. It is occurring at baseline in the communities that have always lived alongside the reservoir 7.
Infectious disease specialists consulted by CNN attributed the season's severity to a convergence of climate drivers: expanded range for O. longicaudatus due to drought cycles disrupted by intense rainfall, forest fires displacing both wildlife and humans into closer contact zones, and tourism growth in backcountry areas that lack cleared undergrowth safety zones 7. Roberto Debbag of the Latin American Vaccinology Society described touristic activity in high-risk areas as carrying "very high danger" when undergrowth management is absent 7.

Asia-Pacific: Indonesia spreads across 9 provinces; Taiwan and Singapore clarify status

Indonesia — Seoul virus confirmed across the archipelago

Indonesia's Ministry of Health (Kemenkes) confirmed 23 Seoul virus HFRS cases from 2024 through epidemiological Week 16 of 2026, spanning 9 of the country's 34 provinces 10. Three patients died; 20 recovered. Among 251 suspected cases tested, 225 were negative and 3 returned inconclusive results.
Geographic concentration is notable: Jakarta (6 cases), Yogyakarta (6), and West Java (5) account for 17 of 23 confirmed cases — the dense, rat-inhabited urban corridors of Java dominating the burden. The other six cases are distributed across Banten, West Sumatra, East Nusa Tenggara, North Sulawesi, West Kalimantan, and East Java 10.
Kemenkes confirmed no human-to-human transmission in any of the Indonesian cases. Seoul virus (Orthohantavirus seulense) spreads exclusively through contact with Rattus norvegicus or Rattus rattus excreta — both cosmopolitan species thriving in Indonesia's urban environment. The Salatiga Class I Health Research and Development Center has previously detected hantavirus in rats across 29 Indonesian provinces, suggesting the 23 confirmed human cases substantially undercount the true exposure footprint 10.
Seoul virus produces a milder hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome compared to Old World Hantaan virus, but the 13% case fatality rate across these 23 cases is above global Seoul virus norms and warrants scrutiny of clinical presentation and care access patterns.

Taiwan — El País false report corrected

Taiwan CDC issued a formal clarification on May 8: no Taiwanese nationals were aboard MV Hondius or among the early disembarkers at Saint Helena 11. The clarification directly addressed a false report in the Spanish newspaper El País, which had cited an anonymous passenger suggesting a Taiwanese national was involved. Taiwan CDC confirmed it is maintaining IHR collaboration channels with WHO, the Netherlands, and Argentina. The episode illustrates the secondary epidemiological risk of unverified media claims during an active outbreak: erroneous national case attributions can misallocate public health monitoring resources.
Two Singaporean passengers who had been aboard MV Hondius tested negative for hantavirus as of May 9 12.

Research and vaccine pipeline: a new antiviral target, and Moderna confirmed

L protein shutoff — opening a door in viral polymerase research

A paper published in Nature Scientific Reports in May 2026 characterizes the shutoff activity of the hantavirus L protein — the viral RNA-dependent RNA polymerase — as mediated by its N-terminal domain 13. "Shutoff" refers to the viral polymerase's ability to suppress host cell gene expression, impeding the antiviral response. The N-terminal domain identification provides a structurally tractable target for antiviral development: compounds that inhibit that domain could, in principle, restore host innate immune sensing during early infection — the window when clinical intervention is most likely to alter disease trajectory.
This follows the February 2026 Cell publication of a 2.3 Å cryo-EM structure of the Andes virus glycoprotein tetramer from UT Austin's McLellan lab — resolution sufficient to guide structure-based vaccine and antibody design 14. A perspective published this week in Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease — "When Rare Zoonoses Travel: Andes Virus, Hantavirus" — explicitly frames the MV Hondius outbreak as a sentinel event for the surveillance gap around imported hemorrhagic fever syndromes 15.
A concurrent Frontiers in Microbiology paper on emerging zoonotic RNA viruses notes that CD8+ T cells in hantavirus infection can undergo bystander activation that bypasses normal PD-1 checkpoint inhibition — a finding relevant to understanding the immunopathology that drives pulmonary edema in severe HCPS cases 16.

Moderna confirms hantavirus mRNA collaboration

Multiple outlets confirmed this week that Moderna has been running an early-stage mRNA hantavirus vaccine program in collaboration with Korea University's Vaccine Innovation Center since 2023 17. Moderna itself described the work as "early-stage and ongoing" preclinical research; NBC News cited experts placing a publicly available product "years away" 18. Barron's noted that Moderna stock has risen approximately 87% in 2026, with an additional jump of more than 10% on the week the hantavirus confirmation circulated 19.
The pipeline context: USAMRIID's trivalent DNA vaccine (covering Andes, Hantaan, and Puumala strains) completed Phase I without safety signals and is the furthest along in any clinical pathway. Jay Hooper's characterization at USAMRIID remains the most honest account of the field's problem: rare, geographically concentrated disease creates no clear site for a Phase III efficacy trial, and without a commercial pull, development timelines compress slowly 20. mRNA platforms, if Moderna's collaboration advances, could sidestep some of those production and scale-up delays once immunogenicity and safety data are in hand.

Situational overview

The immediate operational focus shifts today to Tenerife: disembarkation protocols, nationality-by-nationality repatriation logistics, and the 42-day post-exposure monitoring period that will run into mid-June. Spain's mandatory court confinement order for 14 Spanish nationals sets a legal precedent that other countries may face pressure to emulate or explain away.
Three data points will determine whether this outbreak closes cleanly or opens a secondary transmission chain:
  1. The KLM flight attendant test result — the single pending indicator for whether commercial-flight contact exposure has produced a confirmed Andes virus case outside any cruise ship environment.
  2. Spain's two suspected cases — reported by CNBC Indonesia on May 9 but not yet officially confirmed by Spanish health authorities; if confirmed, they would represent community-level exposure on European soil, a category distinct from all previously confirmed cases.
  3. Argentina's index case sequencing comparison — ANLIS-Malbrán rodent capture and genomic work in the Neuquén/Chubut/Río Negro belt should establish, more precisely than current evidence allows, whether the Dutch couple's exposure was in the central Patagonian corridor or elsewhere along a five-month itinerary that crossed three countries.
The broader risk picture is unchanged from the prior briefing. WHO risk levels remain very low for the general population globally, and the ecology that constrains Andes virus transmission — O. longicaudatus absent from every continent outside South America — holds. But Argentina's above-threshold season, the continuing Buenos Aires province geographic expansion, and the 61–70% El Niño onset probability for May–July 2026 21 together project elevated hantavirus transmission pressure through late 2026 and into 2027, with or without any further cruise ship cases.
Monitoring priorities for the next briefing (May 11, 2026):
  • Tenerife disembarkation completion and any immediate clinical developments
  • KLM flight attendant and Spain suspected case confirmation status
  • First ECDC or Spain MoH statement on any onshore secondary cases
  • Argentina index case genomic comparison update
  • EU/EEA spring HFRS sentinel data (Germany, Finland, Sweden) — still outstanding
  • Korea HFRS surveillance data — not accessed in either collection window to date

Briefing covers the window 2026-05-09 14:10 UTC+8 → 2026-05-10 00:00 UTC+8. Previous briefing: May 9, 2026. Next scheduled publication: May 11, 2026.

このコンテンツについて、さらに観点や背景を補足しましょう。

  • ログインするとコメントできます。