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. 2018 May;24(5):951–952. doi: 10.3201/eid2405.171972

Mycobacterium lepromatosis Lepromatous Leprosy in US Citizen Who Traveled to Disease-Endemic Areas

Ajay Vir Singh 1,, Devendra Singh Chauhan 1
PMCID: PMC5938782  PMID: 29664381

To the Editor: The article by Virk et al. (1) highlighted that a person can acquire Mycobacterium lepromatosis infection without exposure to a person infected with leprosy or to known vectors during short stays (2 trips of 7 days each over 3 calendar years) in Mexico. The authors then concluded that M. lepromatosis lepromatous leprosy is a travel-related hazard for travelers to Mexico or other disease-endemic areas. We note that the exact source of acquiring the M. lepromatosis infection by the patient in this study was entirely uncertain, and experimental evidence was not enough to prove M. lepromatosis to be a travel-related hazard.

In contrast, Jessamine et al. (2) reported M. lepromatosis infection and leprosy-like illness in a patient in Canada who had no history of contact or travel to leprosy-endemic areas. Jessamine et al. indicated that transmission dynamics of M. lepromatosis infection is complex, and undiscovered mechanisms or unknown reservoir interactions may exist in such areas of nonendemic regions. Previous studies have also reported the roles of subclinical cases and environmental reservoirs in the transmission of leprosy (3,4). However, Virk et al. have not disentangled other possible sources (existence of unrecognized subclinical cases, contact with hidden leprosy cases, and environmental reservoir) of prolonged exposure of M. lepromatosis to the study patient in his vicinity. Thus, the assertion of Virk et al. (1) that United States citizens can acquire M. lepromatosis when traveling to Mexico or other leprosy-endemic areas as tourists is misleading and demands extensive research to prove it.

In addition, it is intriguing to note that host genetic determinants can influence the acquisition and onset of leprosy (5). Therefore, the inference of a single case study cannot be generalized for all citizens of the United States. The data from these reports suggest that the epidemiologic studies of leprosy in nonendemic areas should consider travel history to delineate this issue.

Footnotes

Suggested citation for this article: Singh A V, Chauhan DS. Commentary: Mycobacterium lepromatosis lepromatous leprosy in US citizen who traveled to disease-endemic areas. Emerg Infect Dis. 2018 May [date cited]. https://doi.org/10.3201/eid2405.171972

References

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