02387nas a2200313 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653000900055653002600064653001600090653001200106653003000118653001100148653001100159653001200170653001600182653001300198653001500211653002600226653001300252100001500265700001600280700001500296245008900311300001000400490000700410520164200417022001402059 2009 d c2009 Jan10aAged10aAnti-Bacterial Agents10aClofazimine10aDapsone10aDrug Therapy, Combination10aFemale10aHumans10aleprosy10aMiddle Aged10aPortugal10aPrevalence10aRetrospective Studies10aRifampin1 aMedeiros S1 aCatorze M G1 aVieira M R00aHansen's disease in Portugal: multibacillary patients treated between 1988 and 2003. a29-350 v233 a

BACKGROUND: There is an estimate low incidence of patients with Hansen's disease in Portugal. Following the 1982 World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations, extended multidrug therapy (MDT) was started for multibacillary (MB) patients. Patients were then treated with rifampicine (RFP), clofazimine (CLF) and dapsone (DDS) for a minimum of 2 years or until smear negativity. The aim of this study was to evaluate MDT efficacy in our patient population.

METHODS: Retrospective and descriptive study of 102 MB patients who underwent MDT from 1988 to 2003.

RESULTS: The number of new MB patients has gradually increased since 1960, the first year of our consultation, due mostly to a rise in imported cases. Overall, 34% of the subjects were immigrants, mainly from former Portuguese Colonies. Forty-six patients had previously received monotherapy with DDS (mean duration of this treatment, 22 years). Relapse after MDT occurred in 9 cases (8.8%), but importantly, all relapsed cases were smear negative at least on one occasion after the end of treatment, suggesting these were true relapses rather than treatment failures.

CONCLUSIONS: Despite the 2-year WHO-MDT regimen, patients with MB disease clearly face the possibility of relapse. We propose that any reduction in the duration of therapy such as the recently proposed 6-month standard MDT is likely to increase the relapse rate even further. Important issues for future consideration are the needs to identify those at risk of relapse and in need of alternative antimicrobial treatment with a prolonged clinical follow-up.

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