Abstract

Leprosy serology reflects the bacillary load of patients and multidrug therapy (MDT) reduces Mycobacterium leprae-specific antibody titers of multibacillary (MB) patients. The Clinical Trial for Uniform Multidrug Therapy Regimen for Leprosy Patients in Brazil (U-MDT/CT-BR) compared outcomes of regular 12 doses MDT/R-MDT and the uniform 6 doses MDT/U-MDT for MB leprosy, both of regimens including rifampicin, clofazimine, and dapsone. This study investigated the impact of R-MDT and U-MDT and the kinetic of antibody responses to M. leprae-specific antigens in MB patients from the U-MDT/CT-BR. We tested 3,400 serum samples from 263 MB patients (R-MDT:121; U-MDT:142) recruited at two Brazilian reference centers (Dona Libânia, Fortaleza, Ceará; Alfredo da Matta Foundation, Manaus, Amazonas). Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays with three M. leprae antigens [NT-P-BSA: trisaccharide-phenyl of phenollic glycolipid-I antigen (PGL-I); LID-1: Leprosy Infectious Disease Research Institute Diagnostic 1 di-fusion recombinant protein; and ND-O-LID: fusion complex of disaccharide-octyl of PGL-I and LID-1] were performed using around 13 samples per patient. Samples were collected at baseline/M0, during MDT (R-MDT:M1–M12 months, U-MDT:M1–M6 months) and after MDT discontinuation (first, second year). Statistical significance was assessed by the Mann–Whitney U test for comparison between groups (p values < 0.05). Mixed effect multilevel regression analyses were used to investigate intraindividual serological changes overtime. In R-MDT and U-MDT groups, males predominated, median age was 41 and 40.5 years, most patients were borderline lepromatous and lepromatous leprosy (R-MDT:88%, U-MDT: 90%). The bacilloscopic index at diagnosis was similar (medians: 3.6 in the R-MDT and 3.8 in the U-MDT group). In R-MDT and U-MDT groups, a significant decline in anti-PGL-I positivity was observed from M0 to M5 (p = 0.035, p = 0.04, respectively), from M6 to M12 and at the first and second year posttreatment (p < 0.05). Anti-LID-1 antibodies declined from M0 to M6 (p = 0.024), M7 to M12 in the R-MDT; from M0 to M4 (p = 0.003), M5 to M12 in the U-MDT and posttreatment in both groups (p > 0.0001). Anti-ND-O-LID antibodies decreased during and after treatment in both groups, similarly to anti-PGL-I antibodies. Intraindividual serology results in R-MDT and U-MDT patients showed that the difference in serology decay to all three antigens was dependent upon time only. Our serology findings in MB leprosy show that regardless of the duration of the U-MDT and R-MDT, both of them reduce M. leprae-specific antibodies during and after treatment. In leprosy, antibody levels are considered a surrogate marker of the bacillary load; therefore, our serological results suggest that shorter U-MDT is also effective in reducing the patients’ bacillary burden similarly to R-MDT.Clinical Trial RegistrationClinicalTrials.gov, NCT00669643.

Highlights

  • The infection by Mycobacterium leprae in humans is characterized by a wide spectrum of clinico-pathological manifestations associated with distinct bacteriologic, immunologic, and histopathologic features categorized as tuberculoid (TT), borderline tuberculoid (BT), borderline borderline (BB), borderline lepromatous (BL), and lepromatous leprosy (LL) [1]

  • This study including cross sectional and intraindividual analyses showed that both shorter 6 months U-MDT and standard 12 months R-MDT using rifampicin, dapsone, and clofazimine had a similar effect on leprosy specific serology, reducing the antibodies of MB leprosy patients to three well-characterized M. leprae antigens: phenollic glycolipid-I antigen (PGL-I), Leprosy Infectious Disease Research Institute Diagnostic-1 (LID-1), and anti-natural disaccharide-octyl epitope (ND-O)-LID

  • Serology is considered a surrogate marker of the bacillary load and a previous study has shown that MB patients from the R-MDT and the U-MDT groups had similar reduction in the bacillary load [39]

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Summary

Introduction

The infection by Mycobacterium leprae in humans is characterized by a wide spectrum of clinico-pathological manifestations associated with distinct bacteriologic, immunologic, and histopathologic features categorized as tuberculoid (TT), borderline tuberculoid (BT), borderline borderline (BB), borderline lepromatous (BL), and lepromatous leprosy (LL) [1]. Dipstick, particle agglutination, and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) mostly employing the M. leprae–specific native or synthetic di- or trisaccharide epitope of the phenollic glycolipid-I antigen (PGL-I) chemically linked to bovine or human serum albumin via octyl or phenyl group (ND-O or NT-P) have been tested in field-based studies [3,4,5,6,7,8,9] These studies have shown high IgM positivity in MB patients and low positivity in PB patients [5, 10, 11]. ND-O-LID antigen, a single fusion complex of natural disaccharide-octyl epitope (ND-O) of PGL-I and LID-1 has been used for the simultaneous, detection of IgM and IgG antibodies in lateral flow test and ELISA [19,20,21,22,23]

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