Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Fw: (LML) United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Persons Affected by Leprosy and their Family Members


 

Leprosy Mailing List – February 26,  2020

Ref.: (LML) United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Persons Affected by Leprosy and their Family Members

From:  Alice Cruz, Quito, Ecuator


Dear Pieter,

 

The document I sent before is the media advisory that was distributed to the media. Because it aims at targeting the media, it is very different in form and content from this document, which is much more comprehensive. I believe that for the LML's readers, this document (see annex) is more relevant, but I trust your judgement on whether or not to share it.

 

Best regards,

 

Alice


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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Saturday, February 22, 2020

Fw: (LML) Japan: Efforts to protect rights of persons affected by leprosy must continue


 

Leprosy Mailing List – February 22,  2020

Ref.:  (LML)   Japan: Efforts to protect rights of persons affected by leprosy must continue

From:  Alice Cruz, Quito, Ecuator


Dear colleagues,

Japan has achieved remarkable progress in protecting the rights of persons affected by leprosy and these efforts must continue, said Alice Cruz, UN Special Rapporteur on the elimination of discrimination against persons affected by leprosy and their family members, after concluding her eight-day visit to the country.

"I welcome the strenuous efforts made by the Government of Japan, in close cooperation with civil society, which is a good example in eliminating the discrimination and prejudice against persons affected by leprosy (also known as Hansen's disease) and their family members. I urge the authorities to continue and sustain their efforts on international cooperation, especially in the area of protecting the rights of older people."

"I acknowledge the progress made in protecting the rights of this marginalized group in Japan, especially through the Kumamoto district court decisions of 2001 and 2019, as result of a tireless consolidated struggle by affected persons and their family members. I commend the Government for responding to the voice of affected persons by recognizing its responsibility for past violations of their human rights, offering a public apology and compensation, and putting in march a multisectoral approach to Hansen's disease."

"However, systemic change is difficult to achieve and stigmatization at the society and community levels, still exists. While a considerable number of affected individuals have left these institutions over the years, today some 1,100 persons who were segregated by force still live in 13 sanatoriums. With the average age of 86 years, many of them are living with physical and psychosocial impairments, as well as disabilities related to Hansen's disease. They were dehumanized by the forced segregation and sterilization policy, which continued even after the disease, has become curable. They still struggle to restore their dignity and their family ties broken by decades-long institutionalized discrimination."

"Efforts should be strengthened to expand the scope of reparation programmes in order to ensure effective healing; sustain leprosy-related medical and nursing knowledge; guarantee the rights to freedom of expression and legal capacity; provide support services, high quality care and counseling; create environment favorable to rebuild family relationships; and support the application of Nagashima to UNESCO world heritage."  

"Health care services and counseling should be provided on an equal basis in and outside sanatoriums. Affected persons should make free and informed decision about their future, any health matters and palliative care."

During her visit, Cruz held consultations with representatives from relevant Ministries as well as with representatives of civil society organizations, law and health experts, and academia. She visited the Hansen's Disease Museum, the National Institute of Infectious Diseases and the national sanatoriums in Tokyo and Nagashima. She listened to valuable testimonies by several persons affected by Hansen's disease and their family members living in and outside sanatoriums.

The Special Rapporteur will submit a comprehensive report, including findings and key recommendations, to the UN Human Rights Council in June 2020.

  

Ms Alice Cruz is the first UN Special Rapporteur on the elimination of discrimination against persons affected by leprosy and their family members, appointed in November 2017 by the Human Rights Council. Ms. Cruz worked as External Professor at the Law School of University Andina Simón Bolívar – Ecuador and in several Portuguese universities as researcher on health and human rights, in particular leprosy. She participated in the elaboration of WHO Guidelines for Strengthening Participation of Persons Affected by Leprosy in Leprosy Services. She has researched and written on the subject of eliminating leprosy and the stigma attached to it and has interacted with various stakeholders, including persons affected by leprosy.

The Special Rapporteurs are part of what is known as the Special Procedures of the Human Rights Council. Special Procedures, the largest body of independent experts in the UN Human Rights system, is the general name of the Council's independent fact-finding and monitoring mechanisms that address either specific country situations or thematic issues in all parts of the world. Special Procedures experts work on a voluntary basis; they are not UN staff and do not receive a salary for their work. They are independent from any government or organization and serve in their individual capacity.

Follow the Special Rapporteur on leprosy (personal pages) on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/srleprosy and on Twitter @srleprosy

For additional information and media requests before and during the visit, please contact (English only): Younkyo Ahn (yahn@ohchr.org / +41 79 444 3707)

For media inquiries related to other UN independent experts: The Media Unit (+ 41 22 928 9855 / mediaconsultant2@ohchr.org

Concerned about the world we live in?

Then STAND UP for someone's rights today.

#Standup4humanrights 

_______________________________________________________

 

国連専門家、ハンセン病患者・回復者の権利擁護に向けた取り組みの継続を日本に要請

 

東京(2020219日)国連ハンセン病差別撤廃特別報告者を務めるアリス・クルス氏は、8日間にわたる訪日を終えるにあたり、日本がハンセン病患者・回復者の権利擁護において目覚ましい前進を遂げており、この取り組みを継続しなければならないと述べました。

「私は、市民社会との密接な協力による日本政府のたゆまぬ努力を歓迎します。これはハンセン病患者・回復者とその家族に対する差別と偏見の撤廃を図る好例と言えます。私は当局に対し、特に高齢者の権利擁護の分野での国際協力に関する取り組みを継続、持続するよう強く促します」クルス氏はこのように語っています。

「私は、患者・回復者とその家族による飽くなき集団的な闘争の結果、特に2001年と2019年の熊本地方裁判所判決を通じ、これら日本国内で疎外された人々の権利擁護が前進したことを認識します。また、過去の人権侵害に対する責任を認め、公の謝罪と補償を提供し、ハンセン病に対する多部門的アプローチを実施に移すことにより、患者と回復者の声に応えた日本政府を称賛します」

「しかし、体系的な変化の達成は難しく、社会とコミュニティのレベルで、スティグマは今でも残っています。患者と回復者の多くが長い年月をかけて、収容施設を離れたものの、強制的に隔離された約1,100人は現在も、13カ所の療養所で暮らしています。入所者の平均年齢は86歳で、その多くは身体的、心理社会的障害のほか、ハンセン病関連の障害も抱えて暮らしています。こうした人々は、この病気が治療可能となった後も、強制的な隔離と不妊手術の政策によって、非人間化されていました。被害者は依然として、数十年にわたる制度化された差別によって失われた尊厳と、家族の絆の回復に苦闘しています」クルス氏はこう述べています。

「実効的な癒しを確保するために賠償プログラムの範囲を拡大し、ハンセン病関連の医療と介護に関する知識を持続させ、表現の自由権と行為能力を保障し、家族関係の再建に望ましい環境を整備するとともに、長島のUNESCO世界遺産登録申請を支援するための取り組みを強化すべきです」クルス氏はこのようにも述べています。

「療養所の内外で、同じ水準の医療サービスとカウンセリングを提供すべきです。患者と回復者は、その未来や健康問題、緩和ケアに関し、自由に十分な情報に基づく決定を下すべきです」特別報告者はこう語りました。

クルス氏は訪日中、関係省庁の代表のほか、市民社会団体、法律と保健専門家および学界の代表とも協議を行いました。国立ハンセン病資料館や国立感染症研究所、東京と長島の国立療養所も訪問しました。また、療養所内外で暮らすハンセン病患者・回復者とその家族数人からも、貴重な証言を得ています。

特別報告者は20206月、国連人権理事会に調査結果と主な提言を含む包括的報告書を提出する予定です。

/ /// /

アリス・クルス氏は201711月、人権理事会によりハンセン病患者・回復者およびその家族に対する差別の撤廃に関する初の国連特別報告者に任命されました。クルス氏はエクアドルのアンディナ・シモン・ボリバル大学法律大学院で客員教授を務めたほか、ポルトガルの大学数校で、ハンセン病をはじめとする保健と人権に関する研究を行っています。また、ハンセン病患者・回復者のハンセン病サービスへの参加強化に関するWHOガイドラインの策定にも加わりました。ハンセン病の撲滅とこれにまつわるスティグマに関する研究と著作を行う傍ら、ハンセン病の患者と回復者を含め、さまざまなステークホルダーとも連携しています。

特別報告者は人権理事会のいわゆる特別手続の一環として活動します。国連人権システムとしては最大の独立専門家体系をなす特別手続は、特定国の状況または全世界のテーマ別問題に取り組む人権理事会の独立した事実調査・監視メカニズムを総称するものです。特別手続の専門家は任意で活動しているため、国連の職員ではなく、その活動について俸給は受け取っていません。どの政府や組織からも独立し、個人の資格で活動しています。

ハンセン病に関する特別報告者の活動は、フェイスブック(https://www.facebook.com/srleprosy)とツイッター(@srleprosyの個人ページでフォローしてください。

訪日中の詳しい情報や取材要請については、Younkyo Ahn yahn@ohchr.org / +41 79 444 3707)までお問い合わせください(英語のみ)。

その他の国連独立専門家に関するメディアのお問い合わせは、The Media Unit+ 41 22 928 9855 / mediaconsultant2@ohchr.org)までお願いいたします。

私たちが暮らす世界のことが気になるのなら、
今すぐ誰かの権利のために立ち上がろう。
#Standup4humanrights


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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Thursday, February 20, 2020

Fw: (LML) The importance of undiagnosed LL patients in spreading HD

Leprosy Mailing List – February 20,  2020

Ref.:   (LML)  The importance of undiagnosed LL patients in spreading HD

From:  Joel Almeida, London and Mumbai


Note editor: erratum – yesterday (19-02-2020), in the publication of Joel Almeida, it was wrongly claimed that "the primary health care centre nearest to this village is 50 km away, in an area with poor public transport". We are sorry for that. Today the correction.



Dear Pieter and colleagues,

I have since cross-checked the news report about Salaunikhurd with independent sources of information.

The distance to the nearest town, where the primary health centre is located, is 4 km. That is under an hour's walk. But it is not certain that MDT stocks are held there.

The distance to the nearest sub-district headquarters, where a community health centre with MDT is located, is 20 km. That is a roughly 3 to 4 hour walk.

Ensuring an uninterrupted supply of MDT within easy reach of every patient is a pre-requisite for HD control.

 

Joel Almeida


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, February 19, 2020

Fw: (LML) The importance of undiagnosed LL patients in spreading HD

 

 

Leprosy Mailing List – February 19,  2020

Ref.:   (LML)  The importance of undiagnosed LL patients in spreading HD

From:  Ben Naafs, Munnekeburen, the Netherlands


 

 

Dear Pieter,

 

I read the extensive message of Joel Almeida and the article in the newspaper he just sent (https://www.theweek.in/health/more/2020/02/10/a-deformed-system.html  - note editor:  very interesting article indeed – please read!).

 

It is clear that only a subpopulation (in a not inbred society) can develop leprosy and thus spread it. That this is genetic is clear. Already Roger and Muir in 1946 saw only 8 % of the exposed develop leprosy. Most researchers cited a similar figure. Only Lara, Palafox and Nolasco (1956) on Cullion reported 36.2% in children living with their affected parents (that was what I cited from memory in my recent letter as 40%). Here exposure and genetics working together is very likely.

 

It is most important to look at the total pool of infective M. leprae and the possibility of surviving in the environment. In the article it is clear that more or less polar lepromatous patients have contributed to that pool. That is why leprosy as Joel states "in some societies behaves like a non-infectious disease as no carriers are known".

 

Leprosy seems not to survive for long on clean non-soil surfaces (though their antigens may be present for a longer time).  I think that when one is exposed mostly through the nose (as in affluent societies) that may explain the more multi bacillary leprosy in these "affluent societies"; in places when you are exposed mostly through the skin, more paucibacillary leprosy will be found. Increasing concrete floors may contribute to nasal direct exposure and thus lepromatous leprosy too (adaptive immune system).

 

How do people in the village bath? Are there regular meetings where people sit close together? Is that on soil or wood or concrete.

 

I feel that it is not only important to define the carriers, but also to look at the route of infection. Do not fall for the Covid-19 approach!


 

Regards

 

 

Ben


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) The importance of undiagnosed LL patients in spreading HD

 

Leprosy Mailing List – February 19,  2020

Ref.:   (LML)  The importance of undiagnosed LL patients in spreading HD

From:  Joel Almeida, London and Mumbai


 

Dear Pieter and colleagues,

 

We have discussed Salaunikhurd village (India) here previously. Careful observations there by the Indian HD program and local professionals offer critical clues about why HD continues to spread and disable so many people.

 

Now details are reported by a journalist:

 

https://www.theweek.in/health/more/2020/02/10/a-deformed-system.html

 

 


 

 

Undiagnosed persons with LL disease can sometimes show no signs of disease. In this illustration, the only sign apart from possible madarosis (loss of eyebrows) is an absence of wrinkles in a 70 year old, although that is not a specific sign. A nasal speculum and a torch might reveal nodules on the nasal mucosa. Skin smears and nasal discharges, however, tend to be almost invariably full of acid-fast globi (dense agglomerations of bacilli) in such patients. Missing such patients and giving them a single dose of a single drug is a recipe for selection of drug-resistant mutant bacilli. That could put HD control out of our reach for decades.

 

A positive skin smear can be the only clue to LL HD. The failure to use skin smears is allowing HD to spread. It is a devastating problem with a simple solution. It seems wise to restore reliable skin smear services widely in India.

 

The primary health care centre nearest to this village is 50 km away, in an area with poor public transport. Apparently, MDT is not stocked there. Patients have to make a three-hour 200 km journey by a twice-daily bus service just to get access to MDT. That is if they have enough money left over after buying the essentials of life. The situation might improve with the new health and wellness centres that each serve about 10,000 people, but only if these centres stock MDT.

 

The Kewat family in Salaunikhurd demonstrate multiple patients with de novo LL disease (LLp, polar LL) within one family. Since the frequency of LLp genomes in the population is probably about 25/100,000, the probability of multiple de novo LL (LLp) patients occurring in one family based on a non-genetic random distribution alone is vanishingly small. Accordingly, genetic predisposition to de novo LL disease appears to play a critical role in the continuing spread of HD.

 

The bacillus has evolved to leave those patients unharmed for relatively long periods, who shed astronomical numbers of viable bacilli in nasal discharges. They remain with few or no obvious signs of disease. Meanwhile, the majority of patients in door-to-door surveys by expert examiners are non-infectious even before treatment, but are saddled with the same label as the highly infectious few. Worse, health services have been focusing largely on self-healing patients with well defined skin patches, while overlooking LL patients who tend to have only subtle signs. It seems wise to help the many non-infectious and self-healing patients to escape any and all stigma, by more careful and accurate education of the public and professionals.

 

There is no substitute for consistent, reliable diagnosis of highly bacillated de novo LL patients, followed by adequately prolonged anti-microbial treatment for them. It is the only tried and tested method so far that produces a 20% decline/year in new cases leading to near-zero transmission. Let's allow the people of endemic countries to benefit from it.

 

Joel Almeida


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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Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Fw: LML) Whole blood RNA signatures in leprosy patients identify reversal reactions before clinical onset: a prospective, multicenter study.

 

Leprosy Mailing List – February 18,  2020


Ref.:  LML)   Whole blood RNA signatures in leprosy patients identify reversal reactions before clinical onset: a prospective, multicenter study.

From:  Ben Naafs, Munnekeburen, the  Netherlands


 

Dear Pieter,

 

As clinician and researcher in the past I hoped and expected that the understanding the immune-system of host would lead us in the management of leprosy patients. I did but not directly. May be like the media I am too early to point at a breakthrough achieved by the group around Annemieke Geluk and Tom Ottenhoff:

 

Whole blood RNA signatures in leprosy patients identify reversal reactions before clinical onset: a prospective, multicenter study.

 

Maria Tió-Coma,1 Anouk van Hooij,1 Kidist Bobosha,1,3 Jolien J. van der Ploeg-van Schip,1 Sayera Banu,4 Saraswoti Khadge,5 Pratibha Thapa,5 Chhatra B. Kunwar,5 Isabela M. Goulart,6 Yonas Bekele,3 Deanna A. Hagge,5 Milton O. Moraes,7 Rosane M. B. Teles,8 Roberta Olmo Pinheiro,7 Erik W. van Zwet,2 Jelle J. Goeman,2 Abraham Aseffa,3 Mariëlle C. Haks,1 Tom H. M. Ottenhoff,1 Robert L. Modlin,8,9 and Annemieke Geluk

 

Sci Rep. 2019; 9: 17931. Published online 2019 Nov 29. doi: 10.1038/s41598-019-54213-y

PMCID: PMC6884598  PMID: 31784594.

 

I enclosed this open source paper for discussion. I do not think that at present it will beat the experienced clinician. But it may be of help (adapted to a simpler affordable test) in the future.

 

Regards,

 

Ben Naafs


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, February 12, 2020

Fw: (LML) Why HD seldom spreads in affluent countries

 

Leprosy Mailing List – February 12,  2020


Ref.:   (LML) Why HD seldom spreads in affluent countries

From:  Joel Almeida, London and Mumbai


 

Dear Pieter and colleagues,

 

HD (Hansen's Disease) is caused by bacilli. The probability of infection in an individual is directly related to how many viable bacilli per unit time are available to that individual, and for how long. For example, before the discovery of effective anti-microbial therapy, those who shared a bed with a patient showed a higher risk of infection than other household contacts. (1) Contacts of MB patients show a higher risk of HD disease than do contacts of PB patients or the general population. That is because untreated MB patients include LL patients who shed very high concentrations of viable bacilli per unit time. This can be as many as tens of millions of viable bacilli per day. (2)

 

Persons with genetically-linked anergy (polar LL, LLp) are likely to show the lowest IDh[]\50 together with the highest probability of disseminated disease. (ID50 is the number of viable bacilli necessary to infect 50% of exposed persons.) Therefore, LLp patients, with their genetically linked anergy and shedding of astronomical numbers of viable bacilli, are predicted to be clustered in families. Multiple-case families with LLp patients are predicted to be far more common than predicted by chance alone. This is likely to be especially true in former segregated colonies where opportunities for marriage with outsiders were restricted. The population of Santo Antonio do Prata in Brazil, a former segregated colony, has yielded useful clues about enrichment of genetic risk factors, although the genetic predisposition to LL disease has probably not yet been fully explored in such formerly segregated colonies. (3,4) 

 

The clustering of all types of HD in endemic countries can be explained by the important role of untreated LLp patients (before or, with recurrences, after fixed duration MDT) as sources of highly concentrated bacilli. The relative importance of host sources of viable bacilli (even via the environment) vs long-standing environmental sources is indicated by the degree of clustering. If long-standing environmental sources were predominant, they would tend to obscure clustering. Then the distribution of newly diagnosed patients would more closely approach a random spatial distribution. Of course, untreated LLp patients are mobile and can therefore form clusters not only around their homes but also around any other places in which they frequently spend reasonably long amounts of time, such as workplaces. Once that is accounted for, the degree of true clustering around untreated LLp patients is likely to be even more marked than observed. 

 

Clusters of HD tend to form also around former leprosy colonies or leprosy hospitals, partly due to enrichment of genetic risks among local residents, but also probably due to the denial of prolonged anti-microbial protection to persons with the LLp genome(s).

 

The LLp genome(s) are likely to be fairly rare, given that only about 1% of newly diagnosed patients are found to have LL disease when highly skilled personnel do periodic door-to-door surveys and intensive contact tracing. (5) Skilled and experienced personnel detect all forms of clinical disease including self-healing forms that tend to be missed altogether by passive case-finding. Only a subset of all LL patients has genetically-linked anergy, with the rest downgrading towards the lepromatous pole in response to the load of viable bacilli. Therefore, the LLp genomes are likely to occur among less than 50% of all newly diagnosed LL patients. These latter in turn form less than 1% of all newly diagnosed patients when case-finding is sufficiently intensive. Further, the cumulative incidence rate of all forms of HD tends to remain below 5000/100,000 population (5% of the population), except in small segregated populations where inter-marriage is frequent (such as Santo Antonio do Prata or endemic islands with small populations). Hence the frequency of LLp genome(s) in the general population is likely to be under (0.5 x 0.01 x 0.05 =) 0.00025 or <25 per 100,000 population. Even then, only upon exposure to the ID50 or more bacilli will these persons develop disease.

 

What happens when an infected but untreated person with an LLp genome, shedding astronomical numbers of bacilli, migrates to an affluent country? Their contacts might well show signs of infection. (6) However, unless the contacts include others with the LLp genome, few if any contacts are likely to develop clinical HD. The rest of the infected contacts have too high an ID50 to develop disease. For transmission to be sustained, a critical mass of infected but untreated persons with an LLp genome is likely to be required. In endemic countries, this critical mass is currently provided by previously treated LLp patients who are now neglected. The probability of contact between one infectious untreated LLp person and an uninfected LLp contact is multiplied by the prevalence of infectious untreated LLp persons. That probability, in turn, is multiplied by the availability of multiple sources of infection. Such sources include not only LLp patients but also (temporarily) the viable bacilli that they shed into the environment. In affluent countries, the infectious untreated person with an LLp genome might never encounter another person with an LLp genome either directly or indirectly. If they do, it might be too briefly to deliver a sufficient infectious dose. Further, the number of viable bacilli shed by a single LLp patient, although very high, is probably insufficient to saturate the environment in affluent countries. Therefore, for practical purposes, HD is expected to behave largely like a non-infectious disease in affluent countries.

 

This general rule about affluent countries is likely to be broken by multiple-case families who have more than one child with an LLp genome. Intrafamilial household transmission is then likely if even one of the persons with an LLp genome remains infectious for some time. This remains true in affluent countries, as elsewhere. Persons from the US-controlled Pacific islands migrating to the USA might well exhibit this kind of multiple-case pattern in the rare instance that one or two families have one infectious LLp parent plus one or more children with the LLp genome(s) living in one household.

 

In affluent countries with widespread sources of concentrated viable bacilli, however, those with an LLp genome are the most likely to be infected. Armadillos are a widespread source of concentrated viable bacilli in some parts of the USA. It can be predicted that the LL type of disease is more frequent among newly diagnosed US-born persons who have never travelled to endemic countries, compared to newly diagnosed patients in endemic countries. This is partly due to no active case-finding in the US, and missed self-healing cases. However, it is also because persons with LLp genome(s) have the lowest ID50 (infectious dose 50). 

 

The important points in the epidemiology of HD, for interruption of transmission, may be summarised as in Figure 1. The important question is, what actions are likely to have the greatest impact in endemic areas?

 

 

 

Figure 1. Polar LL (LLp, de novo LL) patients, before and especially after release from anti-microbial treatment, play an overwhelmingly important role in maintaining the endemic.

 

The other side of this story is the spectacular success of Shandong province, and Uele (DR Congo), in reducing transmission rapidly with the use of prolonged anti-microbial treatment for LL patients (among others). This success was evident while those places were far from affluent. Once the reproductive ratio of LLp patients is reduced to below one, the endemic starts to die out. That's because one person with LLp disease who enters treatment is no longer replaced by an untreated person with LLp disease. Prolonged anti-microbial protection for LLp patients is critical for interruption of transmission. Otherwise, many treated LLp patients eventually experience recurrence and return to the pool of persons shedding astronomical numbers of viable bacilli. We have interrupted transmission before using prolonged anti-microbial protection for LL patients, and we can do it again.

 

The big threat to our success comes from eventual drug-resistance. (7) Monitoring drug-resistance is not the same as preventing it. Drug-resistance is a discontinuity, more like a cliff than a hillside. By the time one has fallen off a cliff, and monitored the fact, it is too late to prevent the fall. Single-dose rifampicin post-exposure prophylaxis (SDR-PEP) is a recipe for hastening the selection of drug-resistant mutants. Along with this risk brought on by SDR-PEP, the people of endemic countries can expect also an increase in the risk of MB disease and a slowing in the decline of HD if they allow SDR-PEP. It would be a double blow to them, and not entirely consistent with the high standards of ethics and compassion on which we pride ourselves. 

 

For the past two decades we have unintentionally fooled nearly everyone, sometimes including ourselves. But we have not fooled the bacilli. 

 

 

 

Figure 2. Newly detected MB patients reported globally, 1985-2017. The definition of MB disease has remained materially unchanged since about the year 2000. The true global decline of HD, as assessed by the number of new MB patients/year, has been modest at best. Once the backlog of undetected MB patients was cleared in the 1992-2005 period, the underlying stagnation in new cases/yr became evident.

 

Short-term gains in financing and glory, based on mistaken claims, are short-lived and tend to backfire. We announced that HD is not a public health problem, so the world took us at our word and started neglecting it. We turned a blind eye to evidence of high recurrence rates among highly bacillated patients after even 2-year MDT, so transmission continued. We need not keep blundering. Any organisation that adopts a defined geographical area and matches the spectacular success of Shandong will have the whole world rushing to congratulate and support them. 

 

This new year in a new decade can be a new beginning. We can act more effectively and match the spectacular achievement of Shandong in interrupting transmission. We know how. Also, great colleagues can keep making improvements to effective field protocols. Let's do it.

 

Joel Almeida

 

 

References

 

1. Rogers L. The Incubation Period of Leprosy. Ind Med Gaz.1924 Feb; 59(2): 65–68.

 

2. Davey TF, Rees RJ. The nasal dicharge in leprosy: clinical and bacteriological aspects. Lepr Rev. 1974 Jun;45(2):121-34.

 

3. Cambri G, Mira MT. Genetic Susceptibility to Leprosy—From Classic Immune-Related Candidate Genes to Hypothesis-Free, Whole Genome Approaches. Front. Immunol., 20 July 2018 | https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.01674

 

4. Lázaro FP, Werneck RI, Mackert CCO et al. A Major Gene Controls Leprosy Susceptibility in a Hyperendemic Isolated Population from North of Brazil. The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 201, Issue 10, 15 May 2010, Pages 1598–1605, https://doi.org/10.1086/652007

 

5. Norman G, Raja Samuel Bhushanam JD, Samuel P. Trends in leprosy over fifty years in Gudiyatham Taluk, Vellore, Tamil Nadu. Indian J Lepr. 2006 Apr-Jun;78(2):167-85.

 

6. Dockrell HM, Young S, Macfarlane A. Possible Transmission of Mycobacterium Leprae in a Group of UK Leprosy Contacts. Lancet, 338 (8769), 739-43 1991 Sep 21

DOI: 10.1016/0140-6736(91)91454-3

 

7. Rosa PS, D'Espindula HRS, Melo ACL et al. Emergence and transmission of drug/multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium leprae in a former leprosy colony in the Brazilian Amazon. Clinical Infectious Diseases. 1 July 2019, ciz570, https://doi.org/10.1093/cid/ciz570


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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