Abstract

Contact surveillance is a valuable strategy for controlling leprosy. A dynamic cohort study of leprosy contacts was initiated in 1987 at Oswaldo Cruz Foundation. The objective of this work was to review the data on the major risk factors leading up to the infectious stage of the disease, estimate incidence rates of leprosy in the cohort and characterise the risk factors for the disease among the contacts under surveillance. The incidence rate of leprosy among contacts of leprosy patients was estimated at 0.01694 cases per person-year in the first five years of follow-up. The following factors were associated with acquiring the disease: (i) not receiving the BCG vaccine, (ii) a negative Mitsuda reaction and (iii) contact with a patient with a multibacillary clinical form of leprosy. The contacts of index patients who had high bacilloscopic index scores > 1 were at especially high risk of infection. The following factors were associated with infection, which was defined as a seropositive reaction for anti-phenolic glicolipid-1 IgM: (i) young age (< 20 years), (ii) a low measured Mitsuda reaction (< 5 mm) and (iii) contact with an index patient who had a high bacilloscopic index. BCG vaccination and re-vaccination were shown to be protective among household contacts. The main conclusions of this study indicate an urgent need for additional leprosy control strategies in areas with a high incidence of the disease.

Highlights

  • The leprosy elimination campaign sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO) has successfully reduced the prevalence rate of the disease to less than one case per 10,000 inhabitants worldwide, but the number of new cases in endemic countries has remained stable or increased (Richardus & Habbema 2007)

  • In 1987, researchers began a long-term cohort study of individuals who have come into contact with leprosy patients diagnosed at the Souza Araújo Ambulatory, a regional and national centre for leprosy diagnosis and research headquartered at the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation (Fiocruz) in the city of Rio de Janeiro, which operates under the auspices of the Brazilian Ministry of Health

  • It appears clear that any contact seropositivity that did not evolve into a state of disease corroborates the idea that leprosy infection is only one stage in the interaction between M. leprae and the host

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Summary

Introduction

The leprosy elimination campaign sponsored by the World Health Organization (WHO) has successfully reduced the prevalence rate of the disease to less than one case per 10,000 inhabitants worldwide, but the number of new cases in endemic countries has remained stable or increased (Richardus & Habbema 2007). It appears clear that any contact seropositivity that did not evolve into a state of disease (at least during the observation period) corroborates the idea that leprosy infection is only one stage in the interaction between M. leprae and the host.

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