Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.

BACKGROUND:Leprosy has a global presence; more than 180 thousand new cases were registered in 2013, 15% of which were found in the Americas. The elderly are a very susceptible demographic in terms of developing illnesses, mainly because of characteristics natural to the senescence of the human organ...

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Main Authors: João Sérgio de Sousa Oliveira, Ana Luisa Mendes Dos Reis, Luana Pereira Margalho, Geovanna Lemos Lopes, Alison Ramos da Silva, Niele Silva de Moraes, Marília Brasil Xavier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-09-01
Series:PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007709
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spelling doaj-1157e06fabe24333908a5798320897422021-04-21T23:53:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases1935-27271935-27352019-09-01139e000770910.1371/journal.pntd.0007709Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.João Sérgio de Sousa OliveiraAna Luisa Mendes Dos ReisLuana Pereira MargalhoGeovanna Lemos LopesAlison Ramos da SilvaNiele Silva de MoraesMarília Brasil XavierBACKGROUND:Leprosy has a global presence; more than 180 thousand new cases were registered in 2013, 15% of which were found in the Americas. The elderly are a very susceptible demographic in terms of developing illnesses, mainly because of characteristics natural to the senescence of the human organism. This study's goals were to analyze leprosy in an elderly population from a hyperendemic region of the Brazilian Amazon in a historical series from 2004 to 2013 and to determine the clinical and epidemiological profile of a series of leprosy cases of elderly people in the period spanning from 2009 to 2013. METHODS:To achieve these goals, an observational, longitudinal, retrospective and descriptive study was put together to analyze leprosy in elderly people from data acquired from the Notification Aggravations Information System. Furthermore, a profile of the disease from a retrospective cohort based on data collected from medical records was developed. RESULTS:The number of new cases and the leprosy detection rate decreased across the observed period but remained stable among the elderly. The trend for the next ten years indicates decreases in the number of cases and in the detection rate in the general population and an increase in only the elderly. The overall profile was characterized by a predominance of males (64.32%), the multibacillary clinical form (87.57%), Type 1 reaction episodes (37.50%) and some physical incapacity at diagnosis (49.19%). The risk of reaction was greater in the first six months of multidrug therapy, and the positive result from the skin smear was associated with the greater chance of reactional condition development. CONCLUSIONS:The resulting data demonstrate that leprosy amongst the elderly deserves attention because of the increased susceptibility to disability in this age group, with their higher risk of reaction and their greater level of co-morbidity.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007709
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author João Sérgio de Sousa Oliveira
Ana Luisa Mendes Dos Reis
Luana Pereira Margalho
Geovanna Lemos Lopes
Alison Ramos da Silva
Niele Silva de Moraes
Marília Brasil Xavier
spellingShingle João Sérgio de Sousa Oliveira
Ana Luisa Mendes Dos Reis
Luana Pereira Margalho
Geovanna Lemos Lopes
Alison Ramos da Silva
Niele Silva de Moraes
Marília Brasil Xavier
Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
author_facet João Sérgio de Sousa Oliveira
Ana Luisa Mendes Dos Reis
Luana Pereira Margalho
Geovanna Lemos Lopes
Alison Ramos da Silva
Niele Silva de Moraes
Marília Brasil Xavier
author_sort João Sérgio de Sousa Oliveira
title Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.
title_short Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.
title_full Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.
title_fullStr Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.
title_full_unstemmed Leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the Brazilian Amazon.
title_sort leprosy in elderly people and the profile of a retrospective cohort in an endemic region of the brazilian amazon.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases
issn 1935-2727
1935-2735
publishDate 2019-09-01
description BACKGROUND:Leprosy has a global presence; more than 180 thousand new cases were registered in 2013, 15% of which were found in the Americas. The elderly are a very susceptible demographic in terms of developing illnesses, mainly because of characteristics natural to the senescence of the human organism. This study's goals were to analyze leprosy in an elderly population from a hyperendemic region of the Brazilian Amazon in a historical series from 2004 to 2013 and to determine the clinical and epidemiological profile of a series of leprosy cases of elderly people in the period spanning from 2009 to 2013. METHODS:To achieve these goals, an observational, longitudinal, retrospective and descriptive study was put together to analyze leprosy in elderly people from data acquired from the Notification Aggravations Information System. Furthermore, a profile of the disease from a retrospective cohort based on data collected from medical records was developed. RESULTS:The number of new cases and the leprosy detection rate decreased across the observed period but remained stable among the elderly. The trend for the next ten years indicates decreases in the number of cases and in the detection rate in the general population and an increase in only the elderly. The overall profile was characterized by a predominance of males (64.32%), the multibacillary clinical form (87.57%), Type 1 reaction episodes (37.50%) and some physical incapacity at diagnosis (49.19%). The risk of reaction was greater in the first six months of multidrug therapy, and the positive result from the skin smear was associated with the greater chance of reactional condition development. CONCLUSIONS:The resulting data demonstrate that leprosy amongst the elderly deserves attention because of the increased susceptibility to disability in this age group, with their higher risk of reaction and their greater level of co-morbidity.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0007709
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