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Thursday, September 19, 2019

FW: (LML) LML QR code


 

Leprosy Mailing List – September 19,  2019

Ref.:    (LML) LML QR code

From:  Pieter Schreuder, Maastricht, the Netherlands


 

Dear colleagues,

 

 

At the recent congress in Manila, Ben Naafs and Sunil Deepak represented LML. For that purpose, a poster was designed (see annex) and an LML QR code established.

 


 

Regarding the congress: in general, in plenary sessions there is a need of a kind of global update on specific areas (like state of the art), which tells about the major discoveries and changes in the past 4 years, so that one can come back with clear ideas about where we are now. Instead, most speakers in the plenary spoke about their own work, a kind of glorified oral presentations usually made in parallel sessions. Another point of concern was that for clinicians the congress had not much to offer. Otherwise, only positive remarks about the congress and the kindness of the Philippine people were heard.

 

During a meeting at the congress, there was a question about the WER 2017 data. Actually, the 2017 data in WER was limited to only 25 countries. However, there is a link where one can get country level data, though it was not included in WER 2017. Dr. Rao from the WHO Leprosy Section reassured that WHO will continue to provide country level data of leprosy from all countries. He also mentioned that they are just 2 persons in the team (Rao together with Coorman from Belgium) and very limited in what they can do.

 

For your information, the latest leprosy data from 2018 came out at the end of August  (https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/326775/WER9435-36-en-fr.pdf?ua=1)

 

Not surprisingly, many who attended the congress knew about LML. However, one remark illustrated a misunderstanding about LML: "that there are always the same few people who write for LML". That is also our point of concern that so few people take an active part in the discussions. We have to stress again that:

 

LML is an open forum, anybody is welcome and can bring in his experience or opinion. This is a plea to all LML members: please come forwards – your contribution will be very much appreciated!

 

For the coming two weeks, I will be absent from LML. In October, I will take up coordinating LML again.

 

 

Best wishes,

 

 

Pieter AM Schreuder

Editor LML


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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FW: (LML) MB-patient from Guinea

 

Leprosy Mailing List – September 19,  2019

Ref.:    (LML) MB-patient from Guinea

From:  Arry Pongtiku, Papua, Indonesia


Dear Pieter,

 

I would like to thank Dr. Strahm for sharing this difficult post RFT case. As I saw the pictures, it seems clear to me, that he is suffered from chronic ENL. He has complications like wounds and arthritis, may be the patient cannot walk. The case appeared being in poor nutrition. 

 

My experience for recurrent ENL is that we can give high dose clofazimine 3x100 for 2 months, tapering  2x100 for  2 months and 1x100 for 2 months.  Clofazimine also works as anti inflammation. Be careful not to give prednisolone when there are open wounds. Extra nutrition such as milk with high protein (pediasure milk) and green beans. Physiotherapy to help for his legs mobile. Wound care use water /NaCl solution and vegetable oil. Personal hygiene is important as well. 

 

Check all possibilities of a reaction trigger. Often low haemoglobin: one can give Fe, vitamin and anthelmintics such as albendazole or pyrantel. For sources of infection one can give antibiotics. Check for malaria. To test also for example for HIV, for sexual transmitted disease and phimosis. Maybe it is a saying: we must check from the hair until the toes!

 

Counselling may be needed for feeling stress/hopeless and give motivation.

 

I usually asked leprosy field worker to learn from and accompany and support such patients to gain more confidence. Not infrequently these patients can be successfully cured.

 

Thank you.

Salam.

 

Arry Pongtiku. 

Former leprosy adviser, Papua, Indonesia.

 


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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Wednesday, September 18, 2019

FW: (LML) MB-patient from Guinea

 

Leprosy Mailing List – September 18,  2019

Ref.:    (LML) MB-patient from Guinea

From:  Stefan Strahm, Zürich, Switserland


Dear LML-Readers,

 

 

Please find attached (file) the history of a MB-patient from Guinea. We would be interested to know his diagnosis and to have ideas for his treatment. Many thanks in advance.

 

This 21-year-old man from a village in Guinea (West Africa) situated at the border between forest and savanna was diagnosed with MB leprosy in 2017. He started treatment and was hospitalized in January 2018 with small festering wounds all over his body (Picture 1 and 2). He was treated with antibiotics (Cloxacillin, Metronidazol) and discharged from hospital in October 2018. At the same time, he finished MB-treatment. In May 2019 he was readmitted with wounds on legs, arms, hands and face. Again, he was treated with antibiotics (Cloxacillin, Amoxicillin, Metronidazol) and local antiseptics, until now without success (Pictures 3 and 4).

 

 

Dr Stefan Strahm,

Centre hospitalier régional spécialisé (CHRS)

Macenta, Guinea.

E-Mail: stefan.strahm@gmx.net

 

 


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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FW: (LML) 8 pillars of a highly effective programme

 

Leprosy Mailing List – September 18,  2019

Ref.:    (LML) 8 pillars of a highly effective programme

From:  Joel Almeida, London and Mumbai


 

Dear Pieter and colleagues,

 

Great colleagues keep providing steadily more pieces of the jigsaw. We need to put these together and boost the effectiveness of our field programmes. What does a highly effective programme look like? The scheme below is based on current HD knowledge as well as highly effective programmes in HD and other diseases. LML's many experts can improve the scheme.

 

Current situation

 

The recurrence rate of disease is high after even 24 months of MDT, especially among patients with a high initial BI. This allows continuing transmission in even the best-run programmes that use all our promising innovations. 

 

 

 

Figure 1. Recurrence rate (endogenous relapse + exogenous reinfection) after release from 24 months of MDT in Cebu, Philippines, based on Balagon et al, 2009 (1).  Patients with an initial BI greater than 4+ showed even higher recurrence rates.

 

Once we protect LL patients after MDT, concentrated bacilli will be unavailable (except from armadillos). That is necessary for zero transmission. Shandong demonstrated this by achieving near-zero transmission. 

 


 


 

Figure 2. New case detection rate contrasting 24 months of MDT in Wenshan/Yunnan (upper line) with prolonged MDT in Weifang/Shandong (lower line). The decline of HD levelled off in Wenshan/Yunnan (upper line) once LL patients were left unprotected after 24 months of MDT. (2)

 

Shandong achieved a 20%/year decline in incidence rate leading to near-zero transmission. This was by using 

 

a) periodic skin camps for case finding with 

b) prolonged anti-microbial protection for LL patients.  

 

We can match or exceed that achievement. We need to ensure active case finding focused on diagnosing LL patients, and post-MDT chemoprophylaxis for LL patients. Currently only well-informed private practitioners in endemic countries give anti-microbial protection to LL patients after the usual duration of MDT. This same level of protection needs to be available to all LL patients. It is critical to interrupting transmission.

 

 

 

 

Figure 3. Trend in MB cases worldwide 1985 to 2017 (source: WHO Weekly Epidemiological Record). The true rate of decline is likely to fall well short of the 20%/year decline demonstrated in Weifang/Shandong (Fig. 2), even allowing for the changing criteria for MB classification.

 

 

The 8 pillars of a highly effective programme

 

The 8 pillars below are likely to make for a highly effective programme. Some of these are already in use in well-run programmes. These 8 pillars can be tailored to each locality. Some tasks require skilled specialist workers, the rest can be allocated to multi-purpose workers or even volunteers.

 

1. Political commitment

 

Generate political commitment, educate political leaders (local, provincial, national) about the disease and our plans to end it. Obtain sufficient investment (from government, NGOs, foundations, philanthropists, other sponsors). Government can appoint a lead agency (government or NGO) to devise, guide & monitor implementation in a given geographical area. Involve cured persons, local politicians, professional associations, NGOs, private practitioners and civil society organisations in local planning and implementation. 

 

Our bid for increased investment rests on 2 main grounds:

 

a) The great and increasing burden of disability caused by HD. The WHO & IHME (Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation) measure this in DALYs (prevalence of disability x weight of disability). A total-population survey in rural Maharashtra state, India, showed that over 2300 persons per million population had visible deformity attributable to HD.(3)  A pilot survey in 2 rural areas of India discovered visible deformity among 15% to 33% of previously treated patients.(4) The frequency of neuropathic pain, psychological symptoms and ostracism compound the weight of disability attributable to HD. HD is more important than sometimes recognised.

 

b) Near-zero transmission in Shandong, using prolonged anti-microbial protection for LL patients. (2) We know how to match that: include monthly post-MDT chemoprophylaxis for LL patients. Shandong's demonstration of near-zero transmission argues strongly for boosted investment to spread the success.

 

2. Training

 

Develop locally appropriate training manuals based on the implementation plan. Recruit and train staff, NGOs and volunteers. Follow up with periodic supervision visits, and on-the-job training. 

 

3. Supplies

 

Set up reliable supply systems (prevent stock-outs of supplies including MDT, prednisolone, graded monofilaments and lab supplies). 

 

4. Skin smear services

 

Skin smears are necessary to help recognise & classify LL patients, especially those with only subtle or equivocal signs. Otherwise some of the most highly bacillated patients can be missed altogether in even door-to-door surveys. Smears can be collected by mobile paramedical workers. Supervisory visits can help maintain the quality of skin smear techniques.

 

5.Case finding

 

Active case finding (especially for LL patients) in high-incidence areas & also in the most densely populated neighbourhoods of towns & cities.


Thorough clinical examination in good light

+ skin smears 
+ examine contacts for signs of disease 
+ counselling by peers and NGO staff for newly diagnosed patients
+ record disability status (visible deformity, eye hand foot score)
+ record GIS location for every newly diagnosed patient, eg., using smartphones with a GIS app and an online recording/reporting system

 

In the remaining areas, all house-to-house surveys for any purpose can be requested to include a search for signs of HD. Smartphones, with access to a downloadable image library, can help diagnosis by inexperienced persons. A printed atlas of clinical signs can also be very useful. However, inexperienced persons still easily can miss those LL patients who show only subtle signs.

 

Shandong used periodic skin camps for case finding. These can be quite effective because expert clinicians can confirm diagnosis without delay. Skin smears can be collected. Peer counsellors and NGO staff can be present to assist newly diagnosed patients. Also, BCG can be made available at each skin camp for contacts of newly diagnosed patients. Skin camps are a useful option for case finding.
 

6. Case management: 


A) MB-MDT for MB patients, PB-MDT for PB patients (check for regular ingestion of drugs during quarterly home visits to MB patients). 

 

B) Quarterly nerve function assessment (MB patients) using graded monofilaments + prompt prednisolone treatment if needed. Equip paramedical workers with transport so that each worker can make quarterly visits to all the MB patients in their allocated area.


C) At collection of each patient's last MDT blister pack, examine the patient and record their disability status (eye hand foot score). 


D) Treatment for complications (type 1 reaction, ENL, pain, psychological symptoms, other complaints) as required


E) Post-MDT chemoprophylaxis for all LL patients (using 3 bactericidal drugs monthly eg., rifampicin, moxifloxacin, minocycline)


F) Rehabilitation + inclusion services (surgery, physiotherapy, orthotics, prosthetics, psychological support services, vocational training, access to disability pension and other entitlements, income generation training, liaison with relevant organisations including human rights NGOs, legal aid, advocacy training etc.)

 

7. Recording and reporting system

 

Analyse successive cohorts for treatment completion, age, sex, HD classification, & disability status before/after MDT. Use a GIS to identify epidemiological hot spots. Intensify supervisory visits to under-performing health centres. Establish symbolic awards for high-performing health centres. Ensure continuous improvement of implementation, with periodic supervisory visits.

 

8. Public education


Can include messages such as the following -

Most new patients found by door-to-door surveys are non-infectious even before treatment. All treated patients soon become non-infectious. 

Effective treatment is available free of charge at government health centres.

Hansen's Disease is caused by a germ that can be killed by effective treatment. It is not a sign of shame nor a punishment for past behaviour.

Nearly everyone is naturally immune to HD. Those who lack natural immunity can catch the germ if sufficiently exposed, regardless of how wealthy they are.

HD can be harmless if properly treated, but can lead to serious damage to limbs, nerves, eyes and minds if left untreated.

Examine yourself and your children for signs that might suggest HD: thickened skin especially on ears, skin nodules, persistent stuffy nose with hard crusts, skin patches with loss of sensation, weakness in hands, difficulty in holding a pen or pencil, dropping things frequently, difficulty in raising toes off the ground, loss of eyebrow hair. If in doubt, visit your nearest government health centre and ask to be examined.

If no experienced government health staff are available, look for an NGO dealing with HD, or a specialist dermatologist. Members of professional associations (Indian Association of Leprologists, Sociedade Brasileira de Hansenologia etc.) are mostly well trained and experienced. 

 

Here is a list of the 8 pillars, which work together to ensure the detection and sufficient protection of LL patients, enabling near-zero transmission as in Shandong.

 

1. Generate political commitment & obtain finance

2. Recruit and train personnel, ensure supervision visits and follow-up training

3. Ensure a reliable uninterrupted supply system

4. Provide skin smear services

5. Do active case finding, especially for LL patients

6. Ensure comprehensive case management, including post-MDT chemoprophylaxis for LL patients and quarterly assessment of nerve function for MB patients, using prednisolone when needed

7. Establish and use a recording and reporting system, monitor outcomes & continuously improve implementation

8. Educate the public

 

Sample surveys


In addition to the 8 implementation pillars above, we need periodic door-to-door sample surveys by teams including expert clinicians, to monitor the true epidemiological situation and trends. Periodic sample surveys have been ordered by India's Supreme Court. The National Sample Survey of HD in India, using expert clinicians and door-to-door visits, showed that 6 out of every 10 HD patients in India remained undiagnosed by the routine programme.(5) Active case finding with door-to-door campaigns now forms part of the Indian programme. In Brazil, one town was believed to have a low incidence rate of HD. However, expert clinicians then found many highly bacillated MB patients who had remained undiagnosed despite prominent signs of HD. (6) Sample surveys by teams including expert clinicians are necessary to reveal the true situation.

 

 

Professional education & talent acquisition

 

Professional societies such as the Indian Association of Leprologists, the Brazilian Hansenology Society and others are educating the next generation of experts. We could also keep inviting the brightest young people in endemic areas to participate in efforts against HD. They can contribute high-quality clues and analysis from the front-lines. Endemic countries such as India and Brazil export brilliant talent across the world. The CEOs of Microsoft, Google, Adobe, Mastercard, Diageo, and many other large enterprises are exports from endemic countries. It would be good to share our enthusiasm and passion for this great work with gifted young people in endemic countries, and ask them at every opportunity: "Would you like to help end Hansen's Disease?" We can create openings for exceptionally gifted young people to participate in ending HD. Salaries remain lower in most endemic countries than in affluent countries, making this approach reasonably affordable. High-calibre talent at the front-lines, existing and new, can help improve the quality and relevance of our technical advice.

 

Research

 

MDR (multiple-drug resistant) bacilli provide a persuasive argument for boosted investment in research of all types. 

 

Other measures 

 

Evidence of epidemiological impact, or lack of it, might strengthen or weaken the case for other measures.

 

A) MIP vaccine for newly diagnosed MB patients and their contacts (7). This is demonstrably effective among persons without genetically determined anergy. That still leaves some others, who have genetically determined anergy.

 

B) Chemoprophylaxis among contacts. It seems wise to avoid single-drug usage so that the selection of drug-resistant bacilli is discouraged. If attempting treatment of contacts, we could ensure that only combinations of bactericidal drugs are used, and for a sufficient duration to cure sub-clinical MB disease. 

 

 A systematic protocol can help to identify LL patients, who sometimes show no clear signs of disease. For example,

Serological testing among contacts (8) ->


if serology is positive, require expert clinical examination and take skin smears to rule out MB disease ->


if MB disease found by clinical exam or positive skin smear, give full MB-MDT ->


in other serologically positive contacts, give a combination of drugs to reduce the risk of selecting drug-resistant bacilli. 

 

MDR (multiple-drug resistant) bacilli could be disastrous and set us back by decades, leading eventually to increased transmission. That is why it is so important to avoid the use of single drugs (monotherapy) among contacts.   

 

 

These 8 pillars above can be tailored for local use. Shandong achieved a 20%/year decline in incidence rate leading to near-zero transmission. We can match or exceed that success in our own areas by including active case-finding for LL patients and post-MDT chemoprophylaxis for LL patients, within these 8 pillars. Wouldn't it be good to succeed? Let's do it.

 

 

Joel Almeida

 

References

 

1. Balagon MF, Cellona RV, dela Cruz E et al.  Long-Term Relapse Risk of Multibacillary Leprosy after Completion of 2 Years of Multiple Drug Therapy (WHO-MDT) in Cebu, Philippines. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2009; 81, 5: 895-9.

 

2. Li HY, Weng XM, Li T et al. Long-Term Effect of Leprosy Control in Two Prefectures of China, 1955-1993. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis. 1995 Jun;63(2):213-221.  

 

3. Ganapati R, Pai VV, Tripathi A. Can primary health centres offer care to the leprosy disabled after integration with general health services? - a study in rural India. Lepr Rev 2008, 79:340–341

 

4. Aggarwal A, Pandey A. Inverse sampling to study disease burden of leprosy. Indian J Med Res 132, October 2010, 438-441.  

 

5. Katoch K, Aggarwal A, Yadav VS, Pandey. A National sample survey to assess the new case disease burden of leprosy in India. Indian Journal of Medical Research, 2017; 146(5): 585-605.

 

6.  Bernardes Filho F, Aparecida de Paula N, Leite MN et al. Evidence of hidden leprosy in a supposedly low endemic area of Brazil. Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz. 2017 Dec; 112(12): 822–828.

 

7. Sharma P, Mukherjee R, Talwar GP et al. Immunoprophylactic effects of the anti-leprosy Mw vaccine in household contacts of leprosy patients: clinical field trials with a follow up of 8-10 years. Lepr Rev. 2005 Jun;76(2):127-43.

 

8. Leturiondo AL, Noronha AB, Oliveira do Nascimento MO et al. Performance of serological tests PGL1 and NDO-LID in the diagnosis of leprosy in a reference Center in Brazil. BMC Infectious Diseases volume 19, Article number: 22 (2019)


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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Monday, September 16, 2019

FW: (LML) DHS and history of heroes




From: Leprosy Mailing List <leprosymailinglist@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 16 September 2019 17:48
To: Leprosy Mailing List <leprosymailinglist@googlegroups.com>
Subject: (LML) DHS and history of heroes
 

 

 

 

Leprosy Mailing List – September 16,  2019

Ref.:    (LML) DHS and history of heroes

From:  Arry Pongtiku, Papua, Indonesia


Dear Pieter,

 

Good morning,

 

I would like to share my papers which I wrote a few years ago but not yet published. May be it can inspire and realise a part of my dreams. See attached files.

 

-Epidemiological DHS among leprosy in Indonesia and its black box

 

-Footprints of Dr Leiker and the first leprosaria in Papua.

 

 

EPIDEMIOLOGICAL DAPSONE HYPERSENSITIVITY SYNDROMES AMONG LEPROSY PATIENTS IN INDONESIA AND ITS BLACK BOX. By Arry Pongtiku. NLR, Papua Provincial Health Office, Indonesia

 

Abstract

Dapsone Hypersensitive Syndromes or DHS is a feeling of sorrow behind the MDT story. A retrospective study from annual progress reports was carried out to describe DHS in Indonesia.

 

Incidence and Mortality Rate of DHS in Indonesia are 0.12% and 13.3%. Incidence of DHS in Indonesia mostly reported from Papua Barat (0.70%), Papua (0.58%), Maluku (0.36%), Sulawesi Utara (0.31%) and Sulawesi Tenggara (0.26%).

 

Efforts to investigate DHS 's through black box may be opened not only traditionally epidemiological approach but also biomolecular breakthrough.

 

 

The foot prints of Dr. Leiker and Miei, the first leprosy colony in Papua, Indonesia. By Arry Pongtiku,MD,MHM,PhD. Former National Leprosy Adviser, Papua, Indonesia

 

Abstract

There is a saying that "good deeds will remain in memory. Until I died I would not forget it". I got an email from Amsterdam to accompany the son of Dr.Leiker, named Dick Leiker; he wanted to know his father and family stories while living in the land of Netherlands New Guinea ( Papua) in 1950-1957. Dick Leiker came to attend the 55th memorial inauguration for the crash of Connie Neutron plane at Owi Island, district Biak Numfor. Dr Leiker was one of the survivals.

 

Miei is recently called Mangurai was the first leprosy colony in Papua. Dr Leiker was chief hospital at Seroei and controlling officer of the leprosy colony at Miei. Until now there is not much written about  leprosy colonies in Papua. This study aims to explore about Dr. Leiker and the leprosy colony. Leprosy control had been introduced since the era of Dutch occupation in Indonesia. They collected leprosy patients and put them in temporary settlements for isolation and general treatments. The purpose of isolation was to protect the transmission of the disease and for social economic aids. The paper also explained the history of leprosy in Papua and spreading of this disease. We compair leprosy data in the past and today. We dream that the ex leprosarium could be a leprosy heritage and as a memoir of the medical history in the land of Papua, Indonesia. Using the snow ball method, the investigation was begun through history of plane crash, tracing foot prints of dr Leiker and the leprosy colony at Miei respectively.

 

 

Thank you,

salam,


Arry Pongtiku, Papua,Indonesia

 


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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