02114nas a2200241 4500000000100000008004100001260001200042653001000054653002500064653001200089653001500101100001100116700001300127700001500140700001400155700001500169245010200184856006600286300000900352490000600361520149100367022001401858 2024 d bMDPI AG10aSpain10aMycobacterium leprae10aLeprosy10aTime trend1 aJuan C1 aLledó L1 aTorralba M1 aGómez JR1 aGiménez C00aLeprosy in Spain: A Descriptive Study of Admissions at Fontilles Sanatorium between 1909 and 2020 uhttps://www.mdpi.com/2414-6366/9/6/130/pdf?version=1718108911 a1-130 v93 a

Background: The study aimed to characterize patients with leprosy admitted to Fontilles throughout the 20th and 21st centuries, focusing on differences across three periods (I, II, and III). It also explored variables linked to patient survival.

Methods: This was a retrospective descriptive study analyzing the medical records of Fontilles patients from 1909 to 2020. It assessed 26 clinical, sociodemographic, and temporal variables (n = 2652).

Results: Most patients were male, single, multibacillary (MB), and farmers, from Andalusia and the Valencian Community. The origin of patients shifted over time towards being mostly foreign-born in period III. More than a half were previously admitted and had family members with leprosy. While leprosy reactions decreased over time, neurological symptoms were increasingly diagnosed. The age at onset, admission, and death increased progressively over time. The survival of patients with leprosy at Fontilles depended on the age at admission and the period.

Conclusions: Improved knowledge, services, and awareness regarding leprosy led to increased age at onset and more favorable outcomes. The prolonged time between symptom onset and diagnosis indicates that leprosy is still a neglected disease. Although MB forms are more severe, leprosy classification did not significantly impact the survival rates of patients at Fontilles.

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