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PERIPHERAL NEURITIS
Thalidomide Nerve Damage
Thalidomide, the drug which caused an epidemic of deformed
babies in the 1960s has a second important side-effect in
causing damage to the peripheral nerves which can be permanent.
Although the drug was withdrawn in 1961, it was re-introduced in
1965 for the management of a complication of leprosy.
Thalidomide is not a cure for this disease, but suppresses an
allergy which arises during the course of treatment. While the
the effect on the fetus can be avoided by not using the drug in
women in the reproductive age group, all patients who take the
drug are at risk of developing nerve damage. The frequency of
this side-effect was originally in dispute, but according to a
recently published book, it is estimated that about 40,000
people suffered from peripheral nerve damage when the drug was
used as a sedative in Germany. It would be expected that leprosy
patients given the drug would also develop nerve damage.
However, despite its use in this disease for over 30 years, not
a single case of nerve damage attributable to the drug has been
reported. Because of its effectiveness in treating patients with
leprosy, Thalidomide was tried out in a number of other
diseases. Here the frequency of nerve damage has been at least
21%. It therefore remains a mystery why there are no reports of
nerve damage in leprosy patients given the drug. Of course
leprosy also affects the peripheral nerves, but there are means
of distinguishing nerve damage due to the disease from the
neurotoxic effects of thalidomide. The background to this
'mystery' is discussed at www.thalidomide.org
Last September, a research letter was published in the Lancet,
the prestigious medical journal. A group of leprosy patients
from Bangladesh were described suffering from severe pain in the
lower limbs despite finishing their treatment. Although no valid
explanation was given for these symptoms and signs, it appeared
to me that the patients could have received thalidomide.
Accordingly, I wrote to the Lancet, suggesting this might be the
case. The Lancet rejected my letter, so I added another
paragraph and sent it to the British Medical Journal. the title
'Is thalidomide to blame? is the same as the letter to the
British Medical Journal published in 1960. This was the first
publication in a medical journal mentioning thalidomide nerve
damage, so it seemed appropriate to repeat the title. The letter
is reproduced as follows
Is
thalidomide to blame?
On
December 31, 1960, Dr Leslie Florence, a Scottish General
Practitioner wrote a letter to the British Medical Journal(1)
entitled 'Is thalodomide to blame?'. Four of his patients had
complained of paraesthesia of the hands and feet, coldness of
the extremities and nocturnal cramps in leg muscles. He
questioned whether these symptoms could be due to thalidomide as
all four had recieved the drug. This was the first report of
thalidomide neuropathy in the medical literature. Although
thalidomide was withdrawn because of its teratogenic effects, it
was subsequently re-introduced for the management of erythema
nodosum leprosum (ENL), a complication of lepromatous or
multibacillary leprosy. Thalidomide has now been used in the
management of a variety of non-leprosy disorders where the
frequency of neuropathy is at least 21%(2). In leprosy,
thalidomide neuropathy has not been reported despite the use of
the drug in high doses and for prolonged periods.
On
September 23, 2000, Hietaharju and colleagues(3) described the
features of chronic pain in leprosy patients after completion of
anti-bacterial treatment. No explanation is given for the
persistence of these symptoms. As all patients had
multibacillary leprosy, it is possible they had episodes of ENL
during the course of therapy, in which case they may have been
treated with thalidomide. The distribution of sensory loss and
in particular, the severe burning pain which Hietaharju et al
describe are very characteristic of thalidomide neuropathy(4).
The intractable nature of the sensory disturbances are also a
feature of this neuropathy(5). Have these patients recieved
thalidomide?
References
Florence AL. Is thalidomide to blame? Br Med J 1960; 2: 1954.
Ochonisky S, Verroust J, Bastuji-Garin S Gheradi R, Revuz J.
Thalidomide neuropathy incidence and clinicoelectrophysiologic
findings in 42 patients. Arch Dermatol 1994; 130: 66-9.
Hietaharju A, Croft R, Alam R, Birch P, Mong A, Haanpaa M.
Chronic neuropathic pain in treated leprosy. Lancet 2000; 356:
1080-1.
Thalidomide neuropathy Lancet 1969: 1: 713-4
Fullerton PM, O'Sullivan DJ. Thalidomide neuropathy: a
clinicalelectrophysiological and histological follow-up study. J
Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1968: 31: 543-51
Once again the letter was rejected. The British Medical Journal
also has a web-site but refused to post the letter, so a great
opportunity has been lost to warn leprosy workers in developing
countries about the dangers of nerve damage following the use of
the drug. There is no indication from either journal that
attempts have been made to find out whether the patients have
been given thalidomide. If the severe disability has been caused
by thalidomide, then the patients should be compensated.
Moreover, if one in five patients given the drug for non-leprosy
disorders develop peripheral nerve damage, thousands of leprosy
patients, who over 30 years have received high doses of
thalidomide, should also have sustained damage to the peripheral
nerves. Even today, new patients who are still being given
thalidomide are at great risk of suffering severe pain for the
rest of their lives.
By
Dr Colin Crawford July 2001
e-mail:clcraw13@hotmail.com
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