Mycobacterium leprae

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Mycobacterium leprae /
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Background

Microbiology

Epidemiology

  • About 1 million cases worldwide each year, but is rare in North America
    • Number may be underestimated due to difficulties with reliable diagnosis
  • Most commonly occurs in Southeast Asia (especially India) and Brazil
  • Decreasing incidence over the past several decades, likely due to short-course multidrug therapy starting in 1982
  • Humans are thought to be the main reservoir, but it has been found in animals as well (particularly armadillos)
  • Transmitted most likely by respiratory droplets, though can also be transmitted by direct contact, transplacentally, through breast milk, and after animal exposure

Risk Factors

  • Age, with peaks in adolescence and ≥30 years
  • Adult men (compared to adult women)
  • Duration of contact with an infected patient, and the burden of bacilli in the patient

Pathophysiology

Clinical Presentation

  • Following exposure, about 95% clear it spontaneously
  • For those who do not, there is an incubation period of 3-5 years (with wide range) that is usually followed by indeterminate leprosy
    • Single, ill-defined, hypopigmented skin lesion
    • About 75% sponetaneously resolve, with the other 25% progressing
  • Classic presentation is anaesthetic hypopigmented skin lesion with thickened nerves

Spectrum of disease

  • Clinical spectrum can be classified based on the number of lesions and burden of mycobacteria
    • Paucibacillary (PB) disease has 1 to 5 skin lesions, without bacilli on skin slit smear
    • Multibacillary (MB) disease has more than 5 skin lesions, with or without nerve involvement or bacilli on slit-skin smear (regardless of number of lesions)
  • Can also be classified based on general clinical appearance
    • Tuberculoid leprosy (TT) corresponds to paucibacillary
    • Borderline tuberculoid leprosy (BT)
    • Borderline leprosy (BB)
    • Borerdline lepromatous leprosy (BL)
    • Lepromatous leprosy (LL) corresponding to multibacillary disease

Type I reaction

  • A cell-mediated hypersensitivity reaction that can develop in the course of treatment
  • Also known as a reversal reaction due to the apparent worsening of the lesion
  • Occurs most commonly in the borderline cases and may signal progression to the cell-mediated tuberculoid end of the clinical spectrum

Type 2 reaction

  • A humorally-mediated hypersensitivity reaction that can develop in the course of treatment
  • Also known as erythema nodosum leprosum
  • Characterized by systemic illness and immune-complex deposition that appears as groups of tender subcutaneous nodules
  • May have other signs of vasculitis, including fevers, arthralgias, neuralgia, lymphadenopathy, orchitis, and dactylitis

Management

Disease Treatment
Paucibacillary 6 months of rifampin, dapsone, and clofazimine
Multibacillary 12 months of rifampin, dapsone, and clofazimine
Rifampin resistance 6 months of at least two second-line drugs with clofazimine, followed by 18 months of one second-line drug with clofazimine
Quinolone resistance As for rifampin resistance, but without a fluoroquinolone

Second-line antibiotics

References

  1. ^ boodman2021le