South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

More leprosy cases are popping up in Florida

Why an ancient disease might be possibly endemic

- By Michelle Marchante and Howard Cohen

Leprosy hearkens back centuries, all the way to its reference in the Bible in the Book of Leviticus. People in Florida are talking about leprosy again — and not just in church or Sunday school.

More cases are popping up across the country, including Florida, where the disease may have become endemic, experts say. Overall, the number of cases have been decreasing across the nation after a rise in several states over the past decade. A disease is considered endemic when it is consistent­ly present in a place. A pandemic, like COVID, can spread far and quickly.

Even though most people have natural immunity against the ancient bacterium that causes leprosy, thousands across the world get sick every year from the nerve and skin disease. And across the nation, which sees about 150 cases a year, infections in the southeaste­rn U.S. have more than doubled in the last decade, according to research published last year in the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Emerging Infectious Diseases peer-reviewed journal.

The report was written by Central Florida doctors Aashni Bhukhan, Charles Dunn and Rajiv Nathoo.

But the experts say that despite new cases being recorded each year, there is no need to panic.

“The ultimate message for the general public, is do not panic,” Dunn, chief resident of the ADCS Orlando Dermatolog­y Residency Program, said in a telephone interview with the Miami Herald. “This is a very rare disease process that is still very uncommon in the United States and something that is highly treatable

if caught early, and not something that people need to be anxious or nervous about. It’s actually incredibly hard to contract — 95% of the population is geneticall­y not susceptibl­e to contractin­g it.”

The study, he said, is aimed at educating the clinical community. The bacteria that fuels the disease is slow growing and can take 5 to 20 years for symptoms to appear, which can make it slip under the radar in routine medical visits, Dunn said.

What the numbers reveal

Despite cases still being recorded in the U.S. and Florida, the overall numbers have decreased the past few years:

In 2022, 136 leprosy cases were reported in the U.S., mostly in Florida, Texas,

New York, California, Arkansas, Louisiana and Hawaii, according to the most recent data available through the National Hansen’s Disease Program in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Florida recorded eight cases in 2022, or about 6% of the cases reported in the country that year, and three of those cases were in Brevard County in East Central Florida, state data shows.

In 2020, Central Florida accounted for nearly one-fifth of the 159 cases reported in the country, according to the CDC report. Florida’s Reportable Diseases Frequency Report found that of the 27 cases that year in eight counties, 20 of those were in Brevard and none in South Florida.

Florida recorded three cases of leprosy in 2024, through March 26, out of a population of nearly 23 million people, according to U.S. Census data — one

leprosy case each in Polk, Sumter and Volusia counties, all in the Central Florida region.

The majority of cases of leprosy are diagnosed and occur outside the United States. Most cases happen in India, Brazil, Indonesia, Nepal, Bangladesh.

What is leprosy?

Hansen’s disease, or leprosy, is a disease that affects the nerves and skin. It’s one of the oldest infectious diseases in human history, and is caused by a slow-growing bacteria called Mycobacter­ium leprae. About 95% of people are naturally immune against the bacterium that causes leprosy, according to the Florida Department of Health.

Symptoms: Leprosy causes discolored patches of skin, lumps and ulcers, and numbness in affected areas.

If left untreated, leprosy can lead to paralysis, crippling of hands and feet, disfigurem­ent and blindness.

What to look for: Dunn says leprosy can appear as patches or plaques that are well marked. These skin patches or plaques tend to be lighter in color, but not always. And if you rub your finger over that area it tends to have less sensation than the surroundin­g skin, Dunn noted. “One mimicker of this is actually psoriasis. So it can look a little like a psoriatic plaque,” Dunn said. Other presenting signs to look for include a loss of the eyebrows and eyelashes and a kind of thickening or furrowing of the facial features. “The ear lobes can start to elongate a little bit as the nerves and the connective tissue kind of gets softer,” Dunn said.

Treatment: Leprosy is typically treated with two or three antibiotic­s simultaneo­usly for one to two years to help prevent the bacteria from developing resistance against the drugs, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says. While treatment can cure the disease and prevent the illness from getting worse, it cannot reverse nerve damage or disfigurem­ent.

The bottom line: “In the past, Hansen’s disease was feared as a highly contagious, devastatin­g disease, but now we know that it’s hard to spread and it’s easily treatable once recognized,” according to the CDC. “Still, a lot of stigma and prejudice remains about the disease, and those suffering from it are isolated and discrimina­ted against in many places where the disease is seen.”

How does leprosy spread?

Even though leprosy has ancient roots, doctors still don’t know how leprosy spreads between people. What they do know is that leprosy doesn’t spread easily and is easy to treat if detected early, according to the CDC.

Scientists believe leprosy can spread by inhaling infected respirator­y droplets that are released when an infected person coughs or sneezes, similar to how flu and COVID spread. However, unlike with flu and COVID, you need to inhale these infected respirator­y droplets over a long period.

“Prolonged, close contact with someone with untreated leprosy over many months is needed to catch the disease,” which means you cannot get leprosy through “casual contact,” such as by shaking hands, sitting next to each other on the bus or sitting together for a meal, according to the CDC. Leprosy is also not spread by sex nor can it be passed on to an unborn child during pregnancy.

Some nine-banded armadillos in the southern United States, including in Florida, are also naturally infected with the bacterium that causes leprosy.

The CDC says it’s possible that contact with the animal could cause a human to get infected although the risk “is very low” and unlikely. The public health agency still cautions people to avoid armadillos when possible.

“There are pockets where nine-banded armadillos appear to carry this particular strain of Mycobacter­ium leprae that also appears in humans but we don’t know how it gets from armadillos to people.

But when they tested the armadillos in different pockets, they showed that for whatever reason, armadillos in Central Florida, as well as five or six other locations, harbored the strains of Mycobacter­ium leprae that people get,” said Dunn, the expert at the ADCS Orlando Dermatolog­y Residency Program.

But in some other U.S. locations where people and nine-banded armadillos also mingle, and where there are no reported cases of leprosy, those armadillos didn’t harbor the Mycobacter­ium leprae strain.

“The transmissi­on is really poorly understood,” Dunn acknowledg­ed.

 ?? CHASE A. FOUNTAIN/TEXAS PARKS AND WILDLIFE/APS ?? Some nine-banded armadillos in the southern United States, including in Florida, are naturally infected with the bacterium that causes leprosy. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it’s possible that contact with the animal could cause a human to get infected, although the risk “is very low” and unlikely. The agency still cautions people to avoid armadillos when possible.
CHASE A. FOUNTAIN/TEXAS PARKS AND WILDLIFE/APS Some nine-banded armadillos in the southern United States, including in Florida, are naturally infected with the bacterium that causes leprosy. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it’s possible that contact with the animal could cause a human to get infected, although the risk “is very low” and unlikely. The agency still cautions people to avoid armadillos when possible.

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