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Moderna has started early-stage work on mRNA vaccines targeting hantaviruses amid renewed global concern after an outbreak linked to the MV Hondius cruise ship, multiple outlets reported May 8–9, 2026.
The company said research began before the recent cruise cases and is being conducted with partners including the US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases and Korea University’s Vaccine Innovation Center.
The WHO has reported confirmed cases and multiple deaths associated with the ship; the outbreak has been linked to the Andes strain, which can spread between people.
Moderna’s announcement and related coverage drove its shares higher (about a 12% intraday rise reported). Other groups, including U.K. biotech EnsiliTech, have been developing mRNA- or nucleic-acid-based hantavirus candidates for years; most efforts remain in preclinical stages.
Researchers warn clinical development will likely take years without large-scale funding or an emergency acceleration comparable to COVID-19 programmes, though newer mRNA platforms could speed design and scale-up.
Work continues on vaccine stability (room-temperature formulations) and strain coverage (including Andes and Hantaan variants).
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r/technologyScientists are working on a hantavirus vaccine
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Commentary underscores that Andes hantavirus is a known rodent‑borne virus capable of rare human‑to‑human spread after prolonged contact, that incubation can be up to eight weeks so further cases may still appear, and that misinformation about lab origins and unproven cures is already circulating and should be treated skeptically.


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