Guy Henry Faget

Guy Henry Faget (1891–1947) was an American doctor who revolutionalized the treatment of leprosy by demonstrating the efficacy of promin, in a paper reported in 1943. Promin is a sulfone compound synthesized by Feldman and his co-workers in 1940 as an agent against tuberculosis effective in experimental animals. He was the grandson of Jean Charles Faget, and father of Maxime Faget.

Guy Henry Faget
Born 1891
America
Died 1947
Nationality America
Occupation Physician, Director of a leper hospital at Carville, America
Known for Discovery of the effectiveness of promin in the treatment of leprosy in 1943

Life

For 25 years he was a distinguished officer of the US Public Health Service. In 1940 he became the director of the United States Marine Hospital (National Leprosarium) at Carville, Louisiana, United States of America. He was a member of the International Leprosy Association (ILA) and a consultant to the Advisory Medical Board of LWM. He died in a fall after having heart disease in 1947.

Leprosy in the United States

On May 7 to 9, 1942, he was invited to the 44th Annual Meeting of the Medical Library Association, New Orleans, and read a paper.[1] In this paper he described the present situation of leprosy in the United States, and the National Leprosarium at Carville with photographs. He hinted important progress would be made in the near future.

Sulfanilamide in the treatment of leprosy

This is the paper written immediately before the promin paper. Toxic effects of this drug were considerable, but among 20 cases, it was effective in 6, and another 2 were also effective but on their road to improvement. One case remained unchanged and 10 cases progressed. In its conclusions, they clearly wrote that sulfanilamide cannot be regarded as a curative agent for leprous lesions, either of the macular or lepromatous type.[2]

The promin treatment of leprosy

Side effects of promin were carefully evaluated, and were concluded to be safely administered, provided blood and urine are examined frequently. Among 22 cases, effective in 15 cases (68%), unchanged in 6 cases (27%), worsened in 1 case(5%), and bacilli became negative in 5 cases (23%). In addition, they did control studies, which produced significant changes, between the promin group and the control group. Impressive photographs were included in the paper.

Table 1
TypeNumberImprovedStationaryWorseBacteriologic reversion from positive to negative
Mixed, far advanced 63211
Mixed, moderately advanced 541o1
Lepromatous, far advanced 11000
Lepromatous, moderately advanced 96303
Neural, moderately advanced 11000
Total 2215615

Other papers

The following papers are based on a Japanese Book Nihon Hifuka Zensho 9,1, "Leprosy"[4]

A message from Faget

This is a message of Faget to leprosy patients which was printed in the Christmas number of the 1941 Star, and therefore is considered to directly address patients for participation in the promin trial.[5]

This is the Modern Age, the Age of Light. Let us have the truth. Leprosy is not a dirt disease. Leprosy is not due to any sin committed by those who contract it. It is not a retaliation of God against its victims. Leprosy is a germ disease just as tuberculosis, typhoid fever and pneumonia are germ diseases. It is no more shameful to be infected with the germs of leprosy than with those of tuberculosis, typhoid or pneumonia. So why discriminate against one of these diseases ? Ignorance is the answer.

Therefore, let us all cooperate and pull together—the patients and personnel. Together we will succeed; divided we will fail. Yes, the day shall come when the dread of leprosy too will pass away just as it did for yellow fever, cholera and tuberculosis. Let us have courage; We are making strides forward and upward, out of the valley of darkness, over the mountains of difficulties, and into the sunshiny plains of tomorrow.

Honors

His discovery paved the way to the complete recovery of leprosy, and many effective chemotherapeutic agents followed. He was honored postmortem at the 7th International Congress of Leprology in Tokyo in 1958 and at the centennial celebration of the Hansen's Disease Center at Carville in 1994.

References

External links

Notes

  1. Symposium on Tropical Medicine , the Story of Leprosy in the United States, Bull Med Libr Assoc, 30: 349-360, 1942
  2. Faget GH et al.(1942) Sulfanilamide in the Treatment of Leprosy Public Health Report Dec 11, 1942(Reprinted in ibid. 121, Supple 1:221-223,2006)
  3. Faget GH, et al. (1943) The Promin Treatment of Leprosy, Public Health Report 58:1729-1741, (Reprint Int J Lepr 34(3), 298-310, 1966)
  4. Nihon Hifuka Zensho, 9,1,"Leprosy", Treatment of leprosy, by Tanimura T, Sakurane T, Kinbara Shuppan, 1954
  5. Courage. Faget GH, The Star 42,6,1. July–August, 1983 (originally in the Christmas issue of the Star 1941)
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