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A clinical prediction rule for nerve-function impairment in leprosy patients

A clinical prediction rule for nerve-function impairment in leprosy patients
A clinical prediction rule for nerve-function impairment in leprosy patients
Background

Nerve-function impairment (NFI) commonly occurs during or after chemotherapy in leprosy and is the key pathological process leading to disability and handicap. We describe the development of a simple clinical prediction rule for estimating the risk of NFI occurrence.

Methods

New leprosy cases who presented to a centre in Bangladesh were recruited and followed up for 2 years in a field setting. We used multivariable regression analysis by Cox's proportional hazards model to identify predictive variables for NFI. Discriminative ability was measured by a concordance statistic. Internal validity was assessed with bootstrap resampling techniques.

Findings

2510 patients were followed up for 2 years, 166 developed NFI. A simple model was developed with leprosy group (either paucibacillary leprosy [PB] or multibacillary leprosy [MB]) and the presence of any nerve-function loss at registration as predictive variables. Patients with PB leprosy and no nerve-function loss had a 1·3% (95% Cl 0·8–1·8%) risk of developing NFI within 2 years of registration; patients with PB leprosy and nerve-function loss, or patients with MB leprosy and no nerve-function loss had a 16·0% (12–20%) risk; and patients with MB leprosy with nerve-function loss had a 65% (56–73%) risk.

Interpretation

Our prediction rule can be used to plan surveillance of new leprosy patients. Patients at low risk of NFI may need no follow-up beyond their course of chemotherapy (6 months); patients with intermediate risk need a minimum of 1 year of surveillance; and patients with high risk should have at least 2 years of surveillance for new NFI. Current recommendations for surveillance of patients with leprosy (for the duration of chemotherapy only) exclude an important group of patients who are at risk of developing NFI after completion of treatment.
0140-6736
1603-1606
Croft, Richard P.
479645a4-a738-4932-938a-a596a34a7f05
Nicholls, Peter G.
524cf465-2f84-41f4-9580-94abed4c3f65
Steyerberger, Ewout W.
94036510-8888-4fc2-9155-c654653c23c6
Richardus, Jan H.
f28a1309-d25f-4501-b5c9-9b7f14bd8c4c
Smith, W. Cairns S.
12c0d943-9be3-40a8-a121-54f4275d1aeb
Croft, Richard P.
479645a4-a738-4932-938a-a596a34a7f05
Nicholls, Peter G.
524cf465-2f84-41f4-9580-94abed4c3f65
Steyerberger, Ewout W.
94036510-8888-4fc2-9155-c654653c23c6
Richardus, Jan H.
f28a1309-d25f-4501-b5c9-9b7f14bd8c4c
Smith, W. Cairns S.
12c0d943-9be3-40a8-a121-54f4275d1aeb

Croft, Richard P., Nicholls, Peter G., Steyerberger, Ewout W., Richardus, Jan H. and Smith, W. Cairns S. (2000) A clinical prediction rule for nerve-function impairment in leprosy patients. The Lancet, 355 (9215), 1603-1606. (doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(00)02216-9). (PMID:10821364)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background

Nerve-function impairment (NFI) commonly occurs during or after chemotherapy in leprosy and is the key pathological process leading to disability and handicap. We describe the development of a simple clinical prediction rule for estimating the risk of NFI occurrence.

Methods

New leprosy cases who presented to a centre in Bangladesh were recruited and followed up for 2 years in a field setting. We used multivariable regression analysis by Cox's proportional hazards model to identify predictive variables for NFI. Discriminative ability was measured by a concordance statistic. Internal validity was assessed with bootstrap resampling techniques.

Findings

2510 patients were followed up for 2 years, 166 developed NFI. A simple model was developed with leprosy group (either paucibacillary leprosy [PB] or multibacillary leprosy [MB]) and the presence of any nerve-function loss at registration as predictive variables. Patients with PB leprosy and no nerve-function loss had a 1·3% (95% Cl 0·8–1·8%) risk of developing NFI within 2 years of registration; patients with PB leprosy and nerve-function loss, or patients with MB leprosy and no nerve-function loss had a 16·0% (12–20%) risk; and patients with MB leprosy with nerve-function loss had a 65% (56–73%) risk.

Interpretation

Our prediction rule can be used to plan surveillance of new leprosy patients. Patients at low risk of NFI may need no follow-up beyond their course of chemotherapy (6 months); patients with intermediate risk need a minimum of 1 year of surveillance; and patients with high risk should have at least 2 years of surveillance for new NFI. Current recommendations for surveillance of patients with leprosy (for the duration of chemotherapy only) exclude an important group of patients who are at risk of developing NFI after completion of treatment.

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More information

Published date: 6 May 2000
Organisations: Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 166977
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/166977
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: c28e5647-4c09-4e7a-862b-de68e4d084cc

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Date deposited: 04 Nov 2010 15:35
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Richard P. Croft
Author: Peter G. Nicholls
Author: Ewout W. Steyerberger
Author: Jan H. Richardus
Author: W. Cairns S. Smith

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