@article{18092, keywords = {Bacterial Vaccines, Child, Combined Modality Therapy, Drug Therapy, Combination, Humans, Leprostatic Agents, Leprosy, lepromatous, Male}, author = {Beena K R and Zaheer S A and Guleria I and Mukherjee R and Talwar G P and Mukherjee A and Ramesh V and Misra R S}, title = {Localized lepromatous leprosy and its response to chemo-immunotherapy.}, abstract = {
BACKGROUND: This is an unusual presentation of lepromatous leprosy (LL) in a young boy, 12 years of age. The study forms part of a large scale immunotherapeutic trial with Mycobacterium w (M.w) antileprosy vaccine. The trial is being conducted in two major hospitals in New Delhi, India.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This patient presented with three lesions: one on each forearm and the third on the left leg. He was classified initially as borderline tuberculoid leprosy. Slit-skin smears and histopathology from the lesions proved the diagnosis to be lepromatous leprosy with a bacterial index (BI) 6+. The initial lepromin test was negative. The patient was treated with chemo-immunotherapy (standard multidrug therapy and immunotherapy with Mycobacterium w vaccine).
RESULTS: Investigations after 1 year (15 months) of multi-drug therapy and three doses of vaccine, showed a remarkable fall in the BI from 6 to 0 in the lesions, a lepromin positivity of 5 mm, and a histological upgrading from lepromatous leprosy to borderline tuberculoid. Immunologic studies at 15 months revealed a good LTT response and high levels of cytokines, specifically IL-2 and IFN-gamma.
CONCLUSIONS: This report presents an LL patient with disease limited to a few sites. It stresses the importance of slit-smear and biopsy in all patients of leprosy, and it highlights the upgrading observed on administration of chemo-immunotherapy.
}, year = {1994}, journal = {International journal of dermatology}, volume = {33}, pages = {64-7}, month = {1994 Jan}, issn = {0011-9059}, doi = {10.1111/j.1365-4362.1994.tb01501.x}, language = {eng}, }