Science Vs

Hantavirus: How Scary Is It??

32 min
May 13, 202618 days ago
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Summary

Science Versus investigates the Hantavirus outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship, examining how the virus spreads, its severity, and pandemic risk. The episode reveals that while Hantavirus is deadly with a 40% fatality rate, the specific Andes strain spreading person-to-person has a low transmission rate (R0 of ~2) and poses minimal pandemic risk compared to COVID or measles.

Insights
  • Hantavirus Andes strain is the only human-transmissible variant, but spreads primarily through close contact (deep kissing, sexual contact) rather than respiratory droplets, limiting outbreak potential
  • Despite 30 years of scientific study since 1996, Andes virus shows virtually no mutation, unlike pandemic-prone viruses like COVID and influenza, suggesting low evolutionary risk for increased transmissibility
  • Long incubation periods (1-8 weeks) create detection challenges, but evidence suggests transmission occurs primarily when patients are visibly symptomatic, reducing asymptomatic spread risk
  • Hantavirus infection severity is unpredictable—young, healthy patients can deteriorate rapidly to ECMO-dependent status within hours, but treatment options are limited to supportive care with no specific antivirals
  • Natural infection rates are surprisingly high (2% of Americas population have antibodies) yet clinical cases remain rare, indicating most infections are mild or asymptomatic, reducing actual disease burden
Trends
Zoonotic spillover diseases from rodents remain a persistent public health concern with seasonal and geographic variationCruise ship environments create unique pandemic risk vectors due to international passenger dispersal and close quarters, requiring enhanced outbreak protocolsViral transmission route diversity (respiratory vs. sexual vs. fecal-oral) significantly impacts outbreak scale and control measuresLong viral incubation periods complicate early detection and quarantine effectiveness in travel-related disease outbreaksComparative virology analysis (R0 values, mutation rates) is critical for distinguishing genuine pandemic threats from localized outbreaksAsymptomatic and mild infection prevalence in zoonotic diseases may be substantially underestimated due to diagnostic bias toward severe casesSexual transmission pathways for respiratory viruses warrant greater epidemiological attention and public health communication
Companies
MV Hondius
Cruise ship where Hantavirus outbreak occurred with 11+ confirmed cases and 3 deaths among passengers
World Health Organization
Cited for global Hantavirus epidemiology estimates of thousands of annual infections worldwide
People
Wendy Zuckerman
Host and executive producer of the Science Versus podcast episode on Hantavirus
Michelle Harkins
Treated dozens of Hantavirus patients in ICU; expert on Sinombre virus and clinical progression
Neil Vora
Expert on zoonotic disease transmission from animals to humans; discussed infection routes
Anne Sheehy
Analyzed Andes virus transmissibility, R0 values, and pandemic risk assessment
Michelle Dang
Producer who conducted expert interviews and contributed to episode reporting
Blythe Terrell
Editor of the episode; also contributed production assistance
Bobby Lord
Mix, sound design, and music composition for the episode
Diane Kelly
Fact-checking for the episode with 80+ citations
Glenn Marsh
Researcher consulted for episode; specific expertise not detailed in transcript
Quotes
"It's not easy to get hantavirus. I actually was bitten by a mouse in my house because my cat chased it in. And I tried to catch it and release it. And I was bit by the mouse. And I was like, great, I'm going to get hantavirus. But I did not get hantavirus."
Michelle Harkins~45:00
"Even in the most dramatic outbreaks we have, the R0 is something like two for Hantavirus. And if you do any quarantining at all, it drops below one. And once R0 drops below one, you're not going to get sustained spread."
Anne Sheehy~55:00
"This virus does not spread easily from person to person. But also, your chance of getting a nasty case of hantavirus from a rodent is also pretty low."
Wendy Zuckerman~50:00
"No, no. Rest easy. This is not it. Get ready because there will be something that's more serious. But no, this is not."
Anne Sheehy~62:00
"They can progress over a matter of three, four, six hours and get worse. If you enter this phase and you really don't seek medical attention, you have over a 50% chance of mortality and you can die within 24 hours."
Michelle Harkins~25:00
Full Transcript
Hi, I'm Wendy Zuckerman, and this is Science Versus. The show that pits facts against another friggin' pandemic? Today on the show, Hantavirus. There's been a lot of reports of an outbreak of a weird virus on the MV Hondius cruise ship. What began as a cruise of a lifetime has instead turned into a major medical mystery and an international crisis. Three people have died amid outbreak of Hantavirus on a cruise ship sailing the Atlantic. The first cases seem to have started with a husband and wife that boarded after a birdwatching expedition. The couple ended up dying along with one other passenger. And over the next few weeks, more cases have started rolling out. The French national has tested positive for Hantavirus following her evacuation from the cruise liner MV Hondias. Now, her condition is said to be deteriorating. 18 American passengers from the Hantavirus-affected cruise ship are now being monitored at two facilities in the United States. One patient has tested positive and is now in a biocontainment unit in Omaha, Nebraska. Global health officials warning there are now 11 total cases of the deadly Hantavirus. Adding that number could go up as the virus can incubate for 42 days. And one thing that's really worrying here is just how deadly this virus is. Something like 40% of people who get diagnosed with it will die. And scarier still, according to news reports, it feels like this hantavirus outbreak is weird because it's spreading from person to person. Experts are confirming there have been cases of a rare strain on the ship that can be transmitted between humans. Meanwhile, officials have been scrambling to track down some people who left the cruise ship before they knew Hantavirus was on board. No surprises, the internet is freaking out. Hantavirus will spread. It absolutely will get worse. Why did they let the people off the boat? Why'd you let them off the boat? Why did you let them off the boat? Everybody better wake the f*** up with this Hantavirus bulls***. We're not doing it again. The Hantavirus, Hannah Montana virus, This is crazy. History is about to repeat itself. I have seen this film before, COVID-19. I want to watch a new film, The Titanic. And I'm getting very, very anxious, very nervous, and they should have sank that motherfucking shit while they had the chance. So today on the show, what is going on with Hunter virus? What happens if you get infected? How is it spreading? And how worried do we need to be here? Could this be the next pandemic? When it comes to Hunter virus, there's a lot of people saying, we're not doing it again. And then there's science. Science vs. Hunter virus is coming up just after the break. Welcome back. Today we're talking all about Hunter virus. And this is the first time a lot of us have even heard of this virus. So we're going to break down exactly what it is, starting with what happens if you get infected. Because on the cruise ship, the three passengers died within just a few days of their symptoms starting, which is very scary. So we wanted to know how things can escalate so quickly. And for this, we called up Professor Michelle Harkins. I am a pulmonary and critical care physician at the University of New Mexico. And she's treated dozens of hantavirus patients in the ICU. And she told us that there are a couple of dozen different types of hantaviruses that can infect humans. The one that Michelle generally sees in New Mexico is called the Sinombre virus. And it is a lot like the version that popped up on the cruise ship. Yeah, they're in the same family. We can call them relatives. So if you get infected with hantavirus and you have all these viral particles in your body, they tend to attack and go after this specific type of cell. So this virus likes a particular cell, the endothelial cell, and it lines all the blood vessels. It lines a lot of the cells in the lung. What happens from here is that your body starts to mount an immune response to get rid of this invader. And that's often when you can start to get sick. in a way that Michelle says might feel pretty familiar at first. So you feel like you have the flu. You're sick, you have fever, chills, body aches, headache. And it's possible that more of us have been infected with hantavirus than we think. Studies have measured the blood of thousands of people for hantavirus antibodies, evidence that hantavirus had weaseled its way into their body and then their immune system responded. And they found that in the Americas, just over 2% of people that they looked at had hantavirus antibodies. A lot of those folks were probably never diagnosed with hantavirus and might have had pretty mild symptoms. But for others who get infected, like some of the passengers on the cruise ship, it can get very nasty. In the first week of symptoms, you can start getting GI problems. So think stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea. And in fact, more than half of the people who actually get diagnosed with hantavirus end up with severe symptoms. And that can happen because your immune system kind of gets completely carried away. It creates this massive inflammatory response. And cause like a war, if you will. It's a whole dysregulation of our immune system that is caused by this virus. This is called a cytokine storm. Cytokines are these small proteins that get secreted by your immune system, and they can go completely haywire during a Hunter virus infection, where they can even start to attack your organs. The same thing can happen with a particularly nasty COVID infection too. But the thing that sets Hunter virus apart is what happens next. So as the Hunter virus keeps attacking those cells that it loves, the endothelial cells, and particularly the cells that line our blood vessels, that lining can start to break down. The blood vessels become very leaky. This means the fluid in your blood vessels, the plasma, can now leach into places it's not meant to go, like your lungs. And fluid can start to build up there. If this happens, your lungs can't bring in enough oxygen, and patients will tell Michelle, Hmm, I'm coughing, or I'm short of breath, I can't catch my breath. And at this point, things can start to go downhill really fast, as your lungs just keep flooding with fluid. That can all progress over a matter of you know three four six hours and get worse If you enter this phase and you really don seek medical attention you have over a 50% chance of mortality and you can die within 24 hours. Another thing that can happen here is called cardiogenic shock. And it's where your heart stops pumping enough blood to get oxygen to your organs. And even if you seek medical attention, your chance of surviving isn't great. We don't have medicine specifically for Hantavirus. Michelle told us that the only thing she can do is really if you catch it early enough, you can put people on oxygen or even something called an ECMO machine. This is like an artificial lung where doctors take your blood out, put oxygen in it and then pump it all back into your body. Michelle told us that she'll hook people up to the ECMO, basically to buy them some time while the virus runs its course. Michelle told us what it was like for some of her patients. She talked to producer Michelle Dang about it. Some of the first patients that I saw came in talking, they were on just a little oxygen and then rapidly deteriorated and were put on ECMO within four hours. and it was striking that it can progress that fast. Can you see that like when you look at a patient who's already come in or expect how they might handle the disease? No, it is really difficult. Some people come in and you're like, oh my gosh, they're going to get worse and they get better and they're off of oxygen in a day or two. And then someone comes in that is, you know, you think a young, healthy-ish person that comes in and they're on two liters of oxygen and then they're on the bypass machine the next day. So you can't just tell by looking. So that's part of what makes Hunter virus so scary. It can sneak up on you and you can get sick really fast and even die. And there's no vaccine to prevent it. So you, me, we don't want to get a nasty case of Hunter virus. How do people get infected in the first place? Now, hantavirus is actually found all over the world. We've seen it on every continent except Antarctica. It's often carried by rodents, but it's also found in animals like bats, moles, and shrews. And usually, just zooming out from the cruise ship outbreak here, people get infected because they come into contact with poo or wee from an infected rodent. We talked about how this can happen with Neil Vora. He's a doctor who studies spillover diseases from animals to people. So, you know, in other scenarios in which we've seen people get infected with hantaviruses is that they're living in areas where rodents are also living, right? Now, maybe someone is then grooming in their house and they're sweeping all these rodent feces. And as you are sweeping and cleaning the house, any dried up rat crap can kind of turn to dust, go up into the air, and then you breathe that in. And you're aerosolizing dust and viral particles at the same time from that feces, and then the person can get infected, right? So that's one possible route of exposure. This virus can also survive stomach acid and potentially infect you if you ate food that's contaminated with, say, little bits of rat poo. The World Health Organization estimates that worldwide thousands of people get hantavirus every year. but they're usually infected with a version that's less deadly than the one on the cruise ship. And we think that the vast majority of these infections worldwide come from direct contact with, say, rodent feces. But with the outbreak on the cruise ship, something different seems to be unfolding. So we think that maybe the first infection, patient zero, got exposed this way that we've just described, through aerosolized rat crap dust. Here's Neil again. So we don't know for sure how the first person got infection. Right now, the leading theory is that this person got infection while in Argentina birdwatching. And birdwatching is a very safe activity. But somehow they might have interacted with the feces, for example, of a rodent or rodent urine. maybe got a bite from a rodent, but that's less likely, and then they got infected. But this is, right now, working theory, but it's highly plausible. Now, one or two people getting Hunter virus directly from breathing in rodent poo or pee, this is not surprising. Because, like we said, Hunter virus is around rodents in a lot of places, including Argentina. What's weird is that most of the time when someone gets Hunter virus from a rodent, it stops with them. Most types of hantavirus cannot spread from person to person. Except the version of hantavirus that showed up on the cruise ship. It's called the Andes virus, and it can. Andes virus is the only hantavirus that we know of that spreads from one person to the next. And that is probably exactly what happened on the cruise ship. And something that's worrying a lot of people right now is that we might not know everyone who's been infected. Because this virus, it can hang around your body for a while before you start showing any symptoms. Producer Michelle Dang asked Professor Michelle Harkins about this. Right after someone breathes in that dust with the hantavirus from mouse poo, what happens next? They may just go on their merry way and then there's an incubation period. And unfortunately, it can be from one to eight weeks. Typically, we see people within about two weeks afterwards, but there are studies showing that it can last up to eight weeks. Eight weeks. That means theoretically some of the people who were on the boat and then left without being quarantined could be infected right now, wandering around, breathing, coughing, listening to podcasts. So after the break, could this lead to the next pandemic? Coming up. Welcome back. Today on the show, Hantavirus. How freaked out do we need to be? So here's where we're at right now. We know that this virus has the potential to spread from person to person. And now the question is, how quickly can it spread? Could this lead to the next pandemic? And to find out more, we called up Professor Anne Sheehy, a virologist and immunologist at the College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts. She's a friend of the show. We've had her on before. and Anne told us that when she heard about this Hunter virus outbreak I wasn happy So as a virologist you never like hearing about a virus that is doing something unusual On top of that, she was like, and it's happening on a cruise ship that's traveling all around the world with passengers from all around the global community who are then going to disperse. That's not a good setup. You're like, oh no. Oh no, I don't want my virologist saying, oh no. But don't worry, because by the end of this episode, you'll be thinking, oh yes, because you'll know more science. And that's always great. Okay, so as we mentioned, this version of Hunter virus that's roaming around the cruise ship is the only one we know that can transmit from person to person, which makes it different to the one that we heard about from the doctor, Michelle, which was called synombre. So Anne told us that to understand what makes the Andes version capable of spreading, we can compare the two. So let's take Andes versus synombre. So if you were to look at those two hauntive viruses, they're pretty highly related, but there's regions that are a little bit different between synombre, which doesn't spread human to human, and Andes that does. One difference is in a protein that sits on the outside of the virus and helps it to break into cells in our body. So for coronavirus, for an allergy, we think about spike, right? The spike protein. So on Andy's virus, instead of they don't have spike, we call it glycoprotein, so GP. If you think about the cells in your body like a house with a tiny little door, GP is the key that allows Hunter virus to open that door, break into our cells and infect us. So these GP proteins are a little bit different on Andes virus. And the consequence is, at least on the sort of infection level, is the Andes virus can infect a wider range of cells. One study found that the Andes virus also seems to replicate faster in, say, heart tissue compared to other versions of Hunter virus. So potentially when you get infected with this Andes version, there's just more viral bits in your body and you have a higher viral load, which could then increase the chance that you go on to infect someone else. And we have examples from other outbreaks that illustrate how this can all play out. So in Argentina, back in 2018 to 2019, we saw one of the biggest Andes virus outbreaks ever recorded. Scientists think that it started when one person got exposed to the virus the usual way from a rodent. And then... So went to a birthday party, was feeling symptomatic, but, you know, birthday party, went. and looks like at that birthday party probably exposed some other people, but at least two other people that went on to then be involved in social events and spread. One of them was the wake of the second person that had died. Yeah, so it spread at the birthday party. Someone died from that infection, and then at their wake, other people got infected. Ultimately, researchers tracked 34 cases and 11 people died. Scientists were able to trace this all pretty well and even test people's blood. And they found that those who had more virus inside their body were more likely to spread the Andes virus to other people. But what's interesting is that we don't actually know exactly how the virus is spreading from person to person. Is it through coughing, through breathing, through touching? Scientists think that generally speaking, you see really close contacts to having a higher chance of spreading it to each other, so not just someone you're passing at the supermarket, say. And we know this, for example, from a study on a cluster of people who got infected in Chile, and they found that sexual contact was a big risk factor for spreading it. And in particular, the paper references deep kissing. That was one of the biggest risk factors they found. And they mentioned deep kissing a lot. They defined it only as exposure to saliva. I guess that is what deep kissing is at the heart of it. Other risk factors in that study were sleeping in the same bed, having sex and being exposed to semen. And on this point, we found another study from 2023 that tracked a 55-year-old man who got infected with the Andes virus and later recovered. But get this, almost six years later, traces of the virus could still be found in his semen. Now, I think this is probably going to make this type of hantavirus sound really scary, right? It can spread from person to person. It could stay in semen for all these years. But it's really important to compare how contagious this virus is to other viruses out there that you know and love, like COVID and measles. So remember the R0 from the height of the COVID pandemic. This is basically the number that scientists calculate to say if you get disease X, how many susceptible people will you pass it on to on average? And for some diseases, this is super high, like measles, famous for being incredibly contagious if you're not vaccinated. It's estimated that if you get it, you could give it to 12 to 18 other people. But for this Hantavirus... So I think even in the most, sort of the most dramatic outbreaks we have, the R0 is something like two for Hantavirus. And if you do any quarantining at all, it drops below one. And once one sun or not drops below one, you're not going to, it's not going to be an outbreak. You're not going to get sustained spread. So I think we're very fortunate that this virus does not spread easily from person to person. This might be partly because Hunter virus doesn't seem to hang around in your nose, throat and lungs in the same way that COVID and influenza does. You know, where a big breath could push out a bunch of viral particles into the air and, you know, maybe infect the person you're talking to. Instead, Hunter virus likes to stick around deeper in the cells of our lungs because it really likes those endothelial cells inside our blood vessels. And the fact that this type of hunter virus doesn't spread that easily from person to person is probably why the largest outbreaks that we've had of it have gotten just a few dozen people sick. Even with this cruise ship outbreak, so far at least, it's hardly gone bananas. In over a month so far we had about a dozen people infected Now in this outbreak it worth pointing out that while there were early reports that a woman got infected after just sitting on a plane near someone who was on the cruise ship and later died of Hantavirus, it now looks like that's not true. The woman on the flight later tested negative. So here's where we are at. Hantavirus, when you compare it to other scary and contagious viruses. It does not spread easily from person to person. But also, your chance of getting a nasty case of hantavirus from a rodent is also pretty low. Michelle, who's our doctor from New Mexico, who's seen how devastating hantaviruses can be, and she lives in a place where the rodents can be infected with hantavirus and people every now and then get infected. So Michelle Dang, our producer, asked her, Do you freak out every time that you see a mouse? No, I don't. You know, we actually have done trapping campaigns, and about 25% of the mice in New Mexico carry hantavirus. It sounds pretty high, though. Does that scare you? Sounds high, but our case rates are really low. So it's not a very easy virus to transmit. And that's like a key thing. It's not easy to get hantavirus. I actually was bitten by a mouse in my house because my cat chased it in. And I tried to catch it and release it. And I was bit by the mouse. And I was like, great, I'm going to get hantavirus. But I did not get hantavirus. I got rat bite fever instead. So she took antibiotics for the rat bite fever. She's totally fine. But the broader point is that even though there's a lot of mice scurrying around New Mexico carrying this virus, pooing and weeing all over the place, and around 2 million people live there, doctors diagnose fewer than 10 cases a year. And our virologist told us that there might be something else working in our favour here too. Although we mentioned before the break that hantavirus can have this long incubation period where you can have two months between getting infected and showing symptoms, which, yes, is a long time. Even Anne said, This is crazy to me. But she also said that unlike COVID, it's not clear that you can actually spread the disease during that time. So here's Anne. It appears at least from the, you know, scant evidence that we do have, from well-analyzed outbreaks, it appears that most of the time, transmission, when it's been documented well, it happens and that person is sick. Like, they are visibly sick. They have a fever. They are not well. And with all of the bonkers stuff on social media that makes this sound so scary, I'm going to give you one more comforting thing. This version of Hantavirus that led to the relatively small outbreak on the cruise ship. It's been known to science since 1996, 30 years ago when Macarena was number one on the charts. And in that time, three decades, it really hasn't mutated, particularly when you compare it to viruses that have caused pandemics. COVID is a master mutator, much like influenza. That's their bread and butter. That's how they survive. But that's not the case with hantavirus. They looked at the Andes virus that circulated in 2018 in this outbreak, and they compared it to another outbreak that had been documented in 1996. So 22 years previously. And the sequences are virtually the same. so put it all together this virus does not spread easily between people which is why when an odd outbreak has happened before it doesn't tend to blow up and so far this virus hasn't been mutating to become better at transmitting between people so when we asked Anne the big question of this episode the question that so many of you guys had is this gonna be the next pandemic here's what she set. No, no. Rest easy. This is not it. Get ready because there will be something that's more serious. But no, this is not. You can be okay. But I think we're not going to see too many more cases. And other researchers that we spoke to said the same thing. I want to be very clear. This current outbreak of Andes virus, this Hantavirus, is not the next pandemic. No, this is not the next pandemic. So yeah, it's not the next pandemic. And I know you might be feeling, hey, some of you scientists said COVID would be fine too, and look what happened. I hear you. But it's easy to forget that COVID was a completely new virus when it just landed on our doorstep in 2019. And at the beginning of the pandemic, scientists were making educated guesses about what was going on and how the virus was going to behave, and they got stuff wrong. With this hunter virus that's causing the outbreak, the Andes version, scientists have been studying it for 30 years. And we know that scary outbreaks tend to be pretty small. But still, if you want to be careful, if you're cleaning up a space that might have rodent poo, wear a mask. And if you have a friend that just got off a cruise ship, avoid deep kisses. That's science versus. This episode has more than 80 citations in it. If you want to read more about hantavirus, understand where we get all of our information from. There's a link to our transcript in the show notes. Go check it out. This episode was produced by Michelle Dang with help from Blythe Terrell, Meryl Horne, Rose Rimler, Akedi Foster-Keys, and me, Wendy Zuckerman. We're edited by Blythe Terrell. I'm the executive producer. Fact-checking by Diane Kelly. Mix and sound design by Bobby Lord. Music written by Bobby Lord, Bumi Hidaka, So Wiley, Emma Munger and Peter Leonard. Special thanks to the researchers we spoke to for this episode, including Professor Glenn Marsh. Science Versus is a Spotify Studios original. You can listen to us for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. If you are listening on Spotify, you can write a comment. We read them all and nice ones are very, very nice. It also helps the show to grow, keeps our bosses happy. So write us a nice comment. Also, you can follow us and tap the bell icon so you get notifications when new episodes come out. I'm Wendy Zuckerman. Back to you next time.