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Pandemics and Biosecurity
12MAY

Ebola trial doses its first patient

2 min read
16:29UTC

WHO dosed the first patient in a Bundibugyo Ebola treatment trial on 2 July, six weeks after naming the coalition behind it and after a regulatory hold that had stalled the drugs since late May.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

WHO's first Bundibugyo treatment trial dosed its first patient on 2 July, months into the outbreak.

WHO enrolled the first patient in a randomised Bundibugyo Ebola treatment trial in Ituri Province, eastern DR Congo, on Thursday 2 July 1. It was the first time in this outbreak that anyone received an investigational drug under trial conditions, six weeks after the coalition running it was first named . Bundibugyo is a rare Ebola species, and until this week clinicians in Ituri could offer only supportive care: fluids, monitoring, and no drug licensed to fight the virus itself.

Patients are randomised to supportive care alone, to supportive care plus the antiviral remdesivir, to the engineered-antibody cocktail MBP134, or to both together, with a separate obeldesivir arm testing post-exposure prophylaxis, the preventive dosing given after a known exposure. Researchers set 28-day survival as the primary measure and estimate they need up to 1,000 participants across several months of enrolment. WHO runs the trial with DRC's national biomedical research institute (INRB), Oxford University and the Antwerp Institute of Tropical Medicine.

Dosing began only after DRC and Uganda regulators cleared the protocol, the approval pending since late May that had kept these same drugs out of patients' reach. That hold, rather than the science, is what left Ituri on supportive care through the weeks when the count climbed fastest. A supportive-care arm remains the trial's scientific control, and with case-fatality running near a third it will draw the objection the 2018 DRC PALM trial did, the design that let two of four Zaire-ebolavirus drugs win licences.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A randomised trial means patients are assigned by chance to one of several treatment options, so doctors can compare how each performs rather than guessing from anecdote. Here, WHO is testing three options at once: two antiviral drugs, remdesivir and obeldesivir, and an antibody cocktail called MBP134. Patients get one of these, or the standard care used for comparison, and researchers track who recovers. Running all three arms together, at one hospital in Ituri Province in eastern DR Congo, means answers arrive faster than testing each drug in a separate study, one after another.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

DRC and Uganda run separate national drug regulators with no mutual recognition agreement covering emergency-use trial protocols. A cross-border design enrolling patients in both countries needs each authority to independently review the same protocol text rather than accept the other's clearance.

That duplicated review, not new safety data, produced the six-week gap between naming the three candidate drugs in late May and dosing the first patient on 2 July, a gap that ran alongside confirmed cases crossing 1,000 with no treatment options yet available.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Ebola's toolkit arrives, outbreak climbs

WHO· 5 Jul 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Ebola trial doses its first patient
Ituri's clinicians can now offer an investigational drug against a virus that had no licensed treatment through the outbreak's steepest weeks.
Different Perspectives
Germany (evacuation recipient)
Germany (evacuation recipient)
Germany received the Bundibugyo outbreak's third international medical evacuation on 13 July, a US humanitarian worker infected in Bunia on 10 July. The evacuation, following a French doctor's 24 June departure and May's first US case, tests whether isolation and biocontainment protocols scale beyond DR Congo's own borders.
Pennsylvania Department of Public Health
Pennsylvania Department of Public Health
PDPH retested and retracted a false-positive measles wastewater signal on 6 July, then confirmed and publicised a real airport exposure from 4 July, with commissioner Palak Raval-Nelson stressing there is no broad threat to the general public. The national count, 2,231 cases across 42 states by 9 July, is on pace to beat 2025's 2,289-case record before September.
World Health Organization
World Health Organization
WHO published its first dedicated Blueprint on fungal disease and antifungal resistance on 1 July, estimating more than 300 million people suffer serious fungal disease annually. The Blueprint names the gap in WHO's own AMR strategy rather than waiting for an external audit to force the admission.
Africa CDC
Africa CDC
Africa CDC issued a formal 11 July appeal for responder protection, training and psychosocial support after health-worker infections tripled from 34 to 112 in a month. The appeal repeats June's unmet call for a rapid Bundibugyo diagnostic test, showing the ask has shifted from tools to basic safety and pay.
Front-line health workers, Ituri Province
Front-line health workers, Ituri Province
Health workers in Ituri Province walked off the job or threatened to strike over unpaid hazard pay and delayed salaries, even as responder infections tripled to 112 with 35 dead. Their absence narrows the isolation workforce the CDC's model says must reach 70% coverage to avoid a 20,000-case worst case.
ECDC
ECDC
ECDC co-published the isolation and contact-tracing figures behind WHO's DON612, tracking Ituri's isolation rate rising from 35 to 44 percent while still rating EU/EEA import risk as very low. Brussels backs the WHO line against travel restrictions, the position France's own contact-tracing response, not the US entry ban, actually validated.