Antileprotic Drugs (Leprosy)
Pharmacotherapy of Hansen Disease — Dapsone, Clofazimine, Rifampicin, WHO Multidrug Therapy & Lepra Reactions
Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU + MUHS · 11
DNBOct '23
DNBJun '22
DNBDec '21
RGUHSNov '19
RGUHSNov '18
MPMSU2017
MPMSU2017
MUHSSummer '17
MUHSSummer '17
MPMSU2010
RGUHSApr '06
Introduction
- Leprosy (Hansen disease) — a chronic granulomatous infection by Mycobacterium leprae (discovered by Armauer Hansen, 1873) affecting skin, mucous membranes and peripheral nerves; carries heavy social stigma but is now entirely curable with multidrug therapy — though deformities already incurred may not reverse.
- M. leprae is an obligate intracellular pathogen with a very long doubling time (~14 days) — mandating prolonged, months-to-years therapy — and cannot be cultured in vitro; drugs were historically evaluated in the mouse footpad model.
- Therapeutic barriers — the lipid-rich (>60% mycolic-acid) waxy cell wall, efflux pumps, and intracellular + avascular localisation of bacilli all impede drug penetration.
- Drug evolution — dapsone has been the sheet-anchor since the 1940s; clofazimine added in the 1960s; rifampicin (developed for TB) is the most rapidly cidal; newer activity later found in fluoroquinolones, minocycline and clarithromycin.
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Antileprotic Leprosy
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