03024nas a2200409 4500000000100000008004100001260007900042653001500121653001000136653000900146653002200155653001100177653002800188653001100216653001100227653001200238653000900250653001600259653002500275653003000300653003200330653001600362100001500378700001300393700001600406700001000422700001200432700002100444700001500465700001800480700001900498245015400517300001100671490000700682520191100689022001402600 2011 d c2011 DecbBlackwell Science : International Society of DermatologyaOxford10aAdolescent10aAdult10aAged10aAged, 80 and over10aBiopsy10aCross-Sectional Studies10aFemale10aHumans10aleprosy10aMale10aMiddle Aged10aMycobacterium leprae10apolymerase chain reaction10aSensitivity and Specificity10aYoung Adult1 aBanerjee S1 aBiswas N1 aKanti Das N1 aSil A1 aGhosh P1 aHasanoor Raja AH1 aDasgupta S1 aKanti Datta P1 aBhattacharya B00aDiagnosing leprosy: revisiting the role of the slit-skin smear with critical analysis of the applicability of polymerase chain reaction in diagnosis. a1522-70 v503 a

BACKGROUND: Diagnosing leprosy is challenging, especially in early-stage cases, and the need for a sensitive diagnostic tool is urgent. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) holds promise as a simple and sensitive diagnostic tool, but its usefulness in the Indian context requires further evaluation. Slit-skin smear (SSS) remains the conventional method of leprosy detection. Hence, this study was undertaken to evaluate and compare the diagnostic efficacy of PCR versus that of SSS.

METHODS: Punch biopsy of skin and SSS were obtained from the active margins of lesions. Cases were clinically grouped according to whether they were multibacillary (MB) or paucibacillary (PB) and classified into tuberculoid (TT), borderline tuberculoid (BT), borderline lepromatous (BL), lepromatous (LL), histoid, and indeterminate groups after clinicopathological correlation. DNA was extracted from biopsy specimens, and multiplex PCR was carried out incorporating primers intended for the amplification of a specific 372-bp fragment of a repetitive sequence of Mycobacterium leprae DNA.

RESULTS: Among 164 patients, PCR was positive in 82.3%. The sensitivity of PCR was significantly greater (P < 0.0001) than that of SSS in both the MB (85.9% vs. 59.8%) and PB (75.4% vs. 1.8%) subgroups; the difference in sensitivity in the PB subgroup is remarkable. Positivity by PCR and SSS was found in 100% of LL and histoid leprosy, but PCR had significantly greater (P < 0.0001) positivity in BT leprosy and was of definite increased value in indeterminate and TT leprosy.

CONCLUSIONS: Polymerase chain reaction had higher sensitivity compared with SSS, especially in diagnostically challenging and PB cases. Thus, the use of this costly but sensitive tool should be restricted to this subgroup, because SSS is sufficiently sensitive in the diagnosis of LL and histoid leprosy.

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