Monday, December 30, 2013

(LML) Thalidomide in treating kidney involvement in ENL

Leprosy Mailing List – December 30,  2013 

Ref.:    (LML) Thalidomide in treating kidney involvement in ENL

From:  Grace Warren, Sidney, Australia


 

 

Dear Pieter,


I am very interested in the letters of Dr. Jingquan Wang and the progress of his patient.  You ask why thalidomide and steroids are not recommended more for lepra reaction.  I was working In Hong Kong for 15 years including all the 1960s when  we started by using thalidomide to treat reaction but as the decade wore on the problems of foetal abnormality after use of thalidomide resulted in it being very difficult to obtain it anywhere except in  S America. In fact it was banned in some countries. 

 

We also realized the tendency for the patients with ENL to become dependent on steroids if they were used alone. So we tried using many variations of drugs available at that time and found some of them did produce undesirable side effects.  However,  I was also involved in the drug trials for  clofazimine  (we started in about 1966)  and we soon found that clofazimine was excellent in  treatment of ENL.  In very  heavy  patients or when the reaction was very severe, we often went as high as 300mgms daily for the first month but usually 200mgms daily was enough. When initiating the antileprosy treatment we did not give, except clofazimine, the other anti-leprosy drugs  for 4-6 weeks, during which time we treated other medical problems like anemia and parasites and malnutrition.  We found that this was excellent in managing new patients with LL leprosy and a tendency to ENL before even starting antileprosy therapy. Of course by 1970 no one had even thought of MDT. We also regularly gave a good dose of multivitamins especially Vit. B 1 as many were short of that due to the maintenance on white rice in which of course most of the Vit. B1 is removed in preparation and  milling.  We were able to do well controlled pathology testing that showed that  clofazimine certainly helped liver function and also did not  usually produce   the problems we saw with some  other drugs that were used in those days.

 

In treating chronic ENL it  was found that clofazamine was usually very effective. We would give 200mgms daily with some form of  relaxant like  valium or just phenobarb  or  amitriptyline  as many of the patients went into reaction because of stress and  worry about their  families. Once it was known that a member of the family had leprosy, the rest of the family were excluded from the community. Clofazamine is of course bacteriostatic and also anti-inflammatory, and in some situations acts as an antibiotic. Once the patient’s condition was  stabilized we would give the other antileprosy drugs and continue using it in lower dosage for the whole duration of treatment.

 

I have treated leprosy in  26 countries of the world and agree that of the many races that I have treated  the Chinese do seem to be those who most  frequently develop  very chronic or long term ENL. I also found that in many countries the use of steroids may lead to unwanted problems as  the patient can often purchase it themselves and continue it when the doctor concerned has tried to stop it. This can of course produce other problems that we do not want to have to treat. I could give many  examples of  patients who have died because of secondary problems they have developed because they were taking  unsupervised  steroids for prolonged periods . As I result I try as far as possible to only use steroids for acute neural deficit or  for a very short term initially in a patient with severe reaction at initiation of therapy.

Yes, I am thoroughly convinced that clofazimine is an ideal drug in the treatment of lepra reaction especially ENL  but when combined with other drugs  can assist in the management of any lepra reaction.

Grace  Warren.
Superintendent Hong Kong Leprosarium( 1960-1975)
Adviser on Leprosy, and Reconstructive surgery  for The Leprosy Mission , 1975-1989)

 


LML - S Deepak, B Naafs, S Noto and P Schreuder

LML blog link: http://leprosymailinglist.blogspot.it/

Contact: Dr Pieter Schreuder << editorlml@gmail.com

 




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