Clofazimine‐induced cutaneous hyperpigmentation as a source of stigma in the treatment of leprosy: A cross‐sectional study

Author:

Nogueira Andreza Soares1ORCID,Garcia Monique Allana Chagas1ORCID,Silva Moises Batista da1ORCID,Costa Patricia Fagundes da1ORCID,Frade Marco Andrey Cipriani2ORCID,Salgado Claudio Guedes1ORCID,Barreto Josafá Gonçalves13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dermato‐Immunology Laboratory Federal University of Pará Marituba Pará Brazil

2. Dermatology Division, Department of Internal Medicine, National Referral Center for Sanitary Dermatology and Hansen's Disease, University Hospital, Ribeirão Preto Medical School University of São Paulo São Paulo Brazil

3. Spatial Epidemiology Laboratory Federal University of Pará Castanhal Pará Brazil

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesCutaneous hyperpigmentation is one of the main adverse effects encountered in patients undergoing leprosy treatment with multidrug therapy (WHO‐MDT). This adverse effect has been described as intolerable and capable of contributing to social stigma. The objectives of this study were to quantify the variation in skin colour induced by clofazimine during and after treatment and to assess the related stigma.MethodsThis observational cross‐sectional study objectively measured skin colour in 51 patients by reading the individual typology angle (ITA°) with a spectrophotometer, followed by the application of the Stigma Scale of the Explanatory Model Interview Catalogue (EMIC).ResultsSkin hyperpigmentation was observed in 100% of the individuals. They showed more negative ITA° values in lesion areas than non‐lesion areas, particularly in sun‐exposed regions. Clofazimine‐induced cutaneous hyperpigmentation was not homogeneous and seemed to follow the lesion locations. The mean EMIC score was 18.8 points.ConclusionAll patients presented skin hyperpigmentation caused by clofazimine, detectable through spectrophotometry. Hyperpigmentation strongly impacted the social domain, indicating the intersectionality of disease and skin colour stigma, contributing to the social isolation of these patients. Health authorities should consider the negative impact of clofazimine on treatment adherence.

Publisher

Wiley

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