Why are evidence based policies not guiding the World Health Organization's
leprosy elimination campaign, asks Diana Lockwood
Leprosy is an infectious disease but it has many features in common with
neurodegenerative disorders. It results in a chronicneurological
illness, which is progressive unless treated; frequentlyproduces
long term disability; and is associated with high levelsof stigma.
As it has a known infective agent, Mycobacterium leprae,there
is the possibility of disease control. Multidrug treatmentwith the
antibiotic combination rifampicin, dapsone, and clofazimineis highly
effective in curing infection, with relapse rates of1%.1
It was hoped that having effective antibiotics would permitdisease
control and thus the concept of leprosy elimination developed.
"Leprosy elimination by the year 2000" was first proposed in 1986and
at the 44th World Health Assembly in 1991 modified by theaddendum
"as a public health problem," defined as less than onecase per
10 000 population.2 The leprosy elimination
campaignhas had some notable successes but also illustrates the
epidemiological,medical, and political problems of the elimination
concept.
Summary points
Leprosy is a leading cause of neurological disability
The World Health Organization's leprosy elimination campaign has
treated 11 million patients, but case numbers are still rising in the
major countries where leprosy is endemic
New methods for diagnosis and treatment proposed by the WHO risk
missing disease and undertreating patients, and an opportunity for
implementing evidence based policies may be missed
Controlling and treating leprosy
Leprosy is a complex mycobacterial disease whose manifestations and
complications are determined by the immune response. Manypatients
experience immune mediated nerve damage, which may occurbefore,
during, or after treatment. Recent field based cohortstudies have
shown that at diagnosis many patients already haveestablished nerve
damage; rates vary from 20% in Bangladesh to56% in Ethiopia,
34 and these patients
have a worse prognosisfor disability. Up to 30% of multibacillary
patients have acuteinflammatory episodes (reactions) affecting skin
and nerves. Prednisoloneis used to suppress reactions and
ameliorates acute nerve damagein about 60% of patients.5
Anaesthesis and paresis in the handsand feet put them at risk of
secondary damage from trauma andinfection, which cause the highly
visible deformities of leprosy(fig 1). The purpose
of controlling leprosy is to reduce the rateand severity of
disability. The key to effective management ofleprosy is early
diagnosis and treatment and early recognitionand management of nerve
damage, combined with effective healtheducation.
Paucibacillary single lesion leprosy (one skin lesion)
Paucibacillary (two to five skin lesions)
Multibacillary (more than five skin lesions)
Neurological assessment and slit skin smears do not contribute to this
classification.
What has the elimination campaign achieved? People and governments were
mobilised, leprosy programmes were revitalised, anddrug treatment
for leprosy was provided free of cost by the SasakawaFoundation
through the World Health Organization. Imaginativeprogrammes were
devised, such as monthly drug delivery circuitsby paramedical
workers to supervise taking the monthly componentsof multidrug
therapy. Morale among patients and workers improved.Eleven million
patients have been given multidrug therapy. Thenumber of registered
patients fell from 5 million in 1985 to 0.7million in 2001. But this
fall was almost entirely attributableto a change of case definition
that includes patients only duringthe course of multidrug therapythat
is, those with active infection.6
Patients with ongoing complications or disabilities due to the
disease areexcluded.
In 2001 WHO claimed that leprosy had been eliminated "at a global level,"
even though 719 330 new patients were registeredin 2000 (fig
2).7 In the 27 top countries
where leprosy isendemic, the incidence did not fall between 1985 and
1999, andin the six countries that account for 88% of new cases the
numbersand incidence of new cases are rising (figs 3
and 4).9 Children
comprise 15% of cases, indicating that active transmission continues.
WHO has now rescheduled elimination for 2005. Integration of previous
leprosy-only programmes into primary health care is the preferred
model. Leprosy is not an easy disease to diagnose, and patientsseen
at peripheral clinics will go undiagnosed, thus apparentlyreducing
the incidence of the disease further.
Fig 1. Nerve impairment with
secondary damage. The boy has bilateral ulnar and median nerve
involvement affecting the hands, with small muscle wasting and finger
clawing; he has lost temperature sensation and burnt his hands when
standing by a fire
The enthusiasm of the WHO for simplifying leprosy management threatens the
achievements of the elimination campaign. Numerouspolicy changes
have emanated from the WHO for direct implementationin the field
without prior research. Skin smears, essential foridentifying
patients with high bacterial loads, have been discontinuedand the
duration of multidrug therapy for multibacillary patientshas been
reduced from 24 months to 12 months despite evidencethat patients
with high bacterial loads are at greater risk ofrelapse.10
The latest WHO document, The Final Push Strategy to Eliminate Leprosy as a
Public Health Problem: Questions and Answers, proposesa new
treatment, accompanied multidrug therapy.11
Patients willbe given all the medicines for the full six or 12 month
courseof treatment at their first, diagnostic, visit with the
provisothat someone close to the patient will take responsibility
forhelping the patient complete the course of treatment. This isa curious reversal of policy. Ten years ago the strength of the
leprosy programme lay in the monthly supervision of medication,which
also meant that nerve damage was picked up early and healtheducation
could be ongoing. The new policy contrasts with thatof directly
observed treatment (DOTS) in the tuberculosisprogrammes.
Another major policy change relates to the recognition and management of
reactions (acute inflammatory episodes). The documentminimises the
need for giving steroids for leprosy reactions,stating, incorrectly,
that most leprosy reactions can be controlledby non-steroidal drugs.
There are no data on the effectivenessof non-steroidal drugs in
leprosy reactions. The document makingthese proposals, which will
guide policy in leprosy endemic countries,has no authors and no
references to published work and statesthat it is not a formal
publication of the WHO. The WHO TechnicalAdvisory Group has now
recommended a further untested policy change:that all leprosy
patients, regardless of disease type, be givena six month triple
drug regimen.12 This would simplify leprosytreatment but give 60% of patients a third drug that they do notneed, and it would undertreat patients with a high bacterial load.It is proposed that this treatment be implemented without a formaltrial. Ominously, the document later notes that "a study of whichthe results will only be published in five years will not help
elimination efforts." Good research is needed to underpin leprosy
policies, particularly since integration will increase the difficultiesof doing field basedresearch.
Policies for leprosy control can be evidence based, as has been shown by an
expert group convened by the International LeprosyAssociation this
year. The group produced evidence based gradedrecommendations on
issues relating to leprosy control, diagnosisand classification,
chemotherapy, nerve damage and rehabilitation,and sustainability of
leprosy services (www.lepra.org.uk/).13Simplifying diagnosis has been considered by both the WHO and
the evidence based group; the WHO document states that in 70%of
patients, diagnosis can be made by a single sign: an anaestheticskin
patch. The evidence based group found that the other 30%are
multibacillary patients, who are more likely to be infectiousand to
develop nervedamage.
Multisectorial partnerships
In 1999 the WHO created the Global Alliance to Eliminate Leprosy (GAEL) in
partnership with the Nippon Foundation, the drugcompany Novartis,
DANIDA (Danish agency for development assistance),and ILEP
(International Federation of Anti-Leprosy Associations,the umbrella
organisation of the non-governmental organisationsfor leprosy) to
provide multidrug therapy for all patients. Butwhen ILEP members
questioned the policies being promoted by theglobal alliance they
were excluded from the partnership. WHO staffhave subsequently
outlined the WHO's position on a web based leprosydiscussion group (noto@cefpas.it).
The differences may arise inpart from different perspectives. WHO
has a global public healthview, treating populations, whereas the
leprosy non-governmentalorganisations have a stronger focus on
treating individuals. Ifintegration is to succeed then all available
leprosy expertisewill need to be mobilised and to work together in a
multisectorialapproach, and the expertise of the non-governmental
organisationswill be invaluable.
Fig 4. Incidence of leprosy in
the top six endemic countries, 1995 and 2000
Elimination is not eradication
The elimination of leprosy will be a virtual phenomenonelimination
of registered cases through very short treatment regimenswithout
reducing the number of new cases. The concept of eliminationat a
prevalence of one case per 10 000 population is a difficultconcept
to understand, and many people confuse it with eradication.There is
no evidence that reaching this predefined prevalencewill reduce
transmission, incidence, or the annual number of newcases. Who needs
this prize, and must it be delivered at all costs?The elimination
campaign has shown how difficult it will be toeliminate leprosy in
countries where it is highly endemic. Thebiology of the organism and
the disease mitigate against easycontrol of transmission.
Lepromatous patients are highly infectiousthrough their nasal
secretions; the organism can survive manymonths outside a human
host; up to 5% of the population in leprosyendemic areas are nasal
carriers of M leprae DNA.14 Lepromatousdisease has a mean clinical incubation time of 10 years.15
If the WHO believes its own rhetoric about eliminating leprosy, then
governments of countries where leprosy is endemic maybelieve it too
and disband their control programmes and dispersetheir skilled
staff. But they may be left with many unansweredquestions. Who will
provide drug treatment after 2005? Who willtrain the primary health
care workers once the vertical programmeshave been disbanded? What
plans are being made for the long termcare of patients with nerve
damage, who will continue to presentfor many years to come? In the
1960s tuberculosis and malariawere pronounced defeated; now we face
global emergencies in controland management for both diseases. It
would be tragic to see thiscycle repeated withleprosy.
Footnotes
Funding:None.
Competing interests: DJNL edits Leprosy Review, which is funded byLEPRA.
World Health Assembly. Elimination of leprosy:
resolution of the 44th World Health Assembly. Geneva: World Health
Organization, 1991.
(Resolution No WHA 44.9.)
Saunderson P, Gebre S, Desta K, Byass P, Lockwood DNJ. The
pattern of leprosy-related neuropathy in the AMFES patients in Ethiopia:
definitions, incidence, risk factors and outcome. Lepr Rev 2000; 71:
285-308[Medline].
Croft RP, Nicholls PG, Richardus JH, Smith WC. The
treatment of acute nerve function impairment in leprosy: results from a
prospective cohort study in Bangladesh. Lepr Rev 2000; 71: 154-168[Medline].
World Health Organization. Report on the third meeting
of the WHO technical advisory group on elimination of leprosy. Geneva:
WHO, 2002.
(WHO/CDS/CPE/CEE/2002.29.)
Klatser PR, van Beers S, Madjid B, Day R, de Wit MY.
Detection of Mycobacterium leprae nasal carriers in populations for which
leprosy is endemic. J Clin Microbiol 1993; 31: 2947-2951[Abstract].
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