Abstract

Background

Leprosy remains an important public health problem in some specific high-burden pockets areas, including the Brazilian Amazon region, where it is hyperendemic among children.

Methods

We selected two elementary public schools located in areas most at risk (cluster of leprosy or hyperendemic census tract) to clinically evaluate their students. We also followed anti-PGL-I seropositive and seronegative individuals and households for 2 years to compare the incidence of leprosy in both groups.

Results

Leprosy was detected in 11 (8.2 %) of 134 school children in high risk areas. The difference in the prevalence was statistically significant (p < .05) compared to our previous findings in randomly selected schools (63/1592; 3.9 %). The 2-year follow-up results showed that 22.3 and 9.4 % of seropositive and seronegative individuals, respectively, developed leprosy (p = .027). The odds of developing overt disease in seropositive people were 2.7 times that of negative people (p < .01), indicating that a follow-up of 10 seropositives has a >90 % probability to detect at least one new case in 2 years. The odds of clinical leprosy were also higher in "positive houses" compared to "negative houses" (p < .05), indicating that a follow-up of ten people living in households with at least one seropositive dweller have a 85 % probability to detect at least one new case in 2 years.

Conclusions

Targeted screening involving school-based surveillance planned using results obtained by spatial analysis and targeted household and individual continuous surveillance based on serologic data should be applied to increase the early detection of new leprosy cases.

Details

Title
Spatial epidemiology and serologic cohorts increase the early detection of leprosy
Author
Josafa Goncalves Barreto; Bisanzio, Donal; Marco Andrey Cipriani Frade; Tania Mara Pires Moraes; Gobbo, Angelica Rita; Layana de Souza Guimaraes; Moises Batista da Silva; Vazquez-Prokopec, Gonzalo M; John Stewart Spencer; Kitron, Uriel; Claudio Guedes Salgado
Pages
n/a
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
14712334
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1779650306
Copyright
Copyright BioMed Central 2015