In the wake of the global trauma caused by COVID-19, any news of a respiratory outbreak aboard a cruise ship naturally triggers alarm. The recent cluster of hantavirus cases on the MV Hondius has sparked public concern and political questioning, with some wondering if the virus has mutated to become a new global threat. However, the scientific community is clear: this is not the start of another pandemic.
While the outbreak has resulted in three deaths and several illnesses, virologists and epidemiologists explain that the biological characteristics of this specific virus make it fundamentally different from SARS-CoV-2. Here is the medical breakdown of why the MV Hondius outbreak is a contained event rather than a systemic risk.
The Andes Virus: A Known Entity
The outbreak has been confirmed as the Andes virus (ANDV). Unlike most hantaviruses, which are transmitted exclusively from rodents to humans, the Andes strain is the only variant documented to spread between people. To the average observer, person-to-person transmission sounds like a red flag for a pandemic; to scientists, it is a known characteristic of this specific strain.

Gaspar Domínguez, a public health specialist who coordinated the response to a previous major hantavirus outbreak in Patagonia, notes that the virus is behaving exactly as expected. Because it is a known strain, there is no evidence to suggest a genomic shift or a new mutation. “The Andes virus is behaving as it behaves, which is transmitting between humans,” Domínguez explains.
Ignacio López-Goñi, a professor of Microbiology at the University of Navarra, reinforces this, stating that while viruses constantly mutate, they rarely change their fundamental mode of transmission overnight. There is currently no scientific data suggesting this virus will suddenly spread more rapidly through the general population.
Why Hantavirus Won’t Mimic COVID-19
To understand why hantavirus lacks pandemic potential, we have to look at its morphology and how it interacts with the human body. There are three primary reasons why it cannot scale like a coronavirus:
- Limited Mutation Capacity: Noemí Sevilla, director of the Animal Health Research Center (CISA-INIA-CSIC), explains that the hantavirus has three fragments of RNA, which limits its ability to mutate compared to the more flexible structure of coronaviruses.
- The “Dead End” Host: Coronaviruses are adapted to humans, allowing them to replicate and evolve within our population. Hantaviruses, however, are adapted to their primary reservoirs—rodents. For the hantavirus, a human host is essentially a “dead end,” meaning the virus cannot efficiently use humans to sustain a long-term chain of transmission.
- Low Reproducibility (R0): While COVID-19 had a very high reproduction rate, hantavirus struggles to infect even one other person under normal circumstances.
“If this had been COVID, there would have been more than 100 infected people on the ship,” observes epidemiologist and public health specialist Joan Caylá.
The “Confinement Effect” on the MV Hondius
If the virus is so poor at spreading, why were there eight cases on one ship? The answer lies in the environment. A cruise ship is a confined, closed space where passengers share air and close quarters. This “confinement effect” created an exceptional scenario that favored person-to-person transmission.
This pattern was previously seen in the 2019 Epuyén outbreak in Patagonia. In that instance, 34 individuals were infected and 11 died. Because the people were gathered in a very small space, some infected individuals produced multiple new cases, while others produced none. The cruise ship environment mirrored these conditions, allowing a limited number of transmissions that would be nearly impossible in a city setting.
High Lethality vs. Low Spread
The danger of hantavirus lies not in its reach, but in its severity. The virus has a high lethality rate, estimated between 30% and 40%, which explains why three deaths occurred among the small group of infected passengers. When the infection complicates, it can trigger rapid hemorrhagic fevers with severe renal or pulmonary compromise and there is currently no specific antiviral treatment available.
However, high lethality does not equal high pandemic risk. Because the virus does not spread easily, it cannot cause the explosive growth required for a pandemic. As Noemí Sevilla puts it, you could pass a person on the street in a major city and have zero risk of contracting hantavirus, whereas a coronavirus would be a legitimate threat.
Monitoring Dispersed Cases
Concerns remain regarding passengers who disembarked the vessel weeks ago. Authorities have confirmed that at least one passenger is currently hospitalized in Switzerland with hantavirus symptoms. While it is possible for a dispersed case to infect another person through extremely close contact, experts believe this is unlikely to spark new outbreaks.
Historical data from Argentina shows that the Andes virus has circulated for years in specific clusters without ever escalating into a large-scale epidemic. The current situation is viewed as consistent with the virus’s known behavior.
Key Takeaways: Hantavirus vs. COVID-19
| Feature | Andes Hantavirus | SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) |
|---|---|---|
| Transmission | Primarily rodents; very limited human-to-human | Highly efficient human-to-human |
| Mutation Rate | Low (3 RNA fragments) | High |
| Lethality | High (30% – 40%) | Relatively lower |
| Pandemic Potential | Very Low | Very High |
| Human Host Role | “Dead end” host | Primary reservoir/host |
Final Outlook
The outbreak on the MV Hondius is a serious medical event for those affected, but it is not a global health emergency. The difference between a localized cluster and a pandemic is defined by the virus’s ability to move through a population—an ability the Andes virus simply does not possess. While vigilance and monitoring of passengers are necessary, there is no scientific basis for pandemic panic.
