Comparative genomics analysis of the Tamil Nadu strain of Mycobacterium leprae has uncovered several polymorphic sites with potential as epidemiological tools. In this study we compared the stability of two different markers of genomic biodiversity of M. leprae in several biopsy samples isolated from the same leprosy patient. The first type comprises five different variable-number tandem repeats (VNTR), while the second is composed of three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP). Contrasting results were obtained, since no variation was seen in the SNP profiles of M. leprae from 42 patients from 7 different locations in Mali whereas the VNTR profiles varied considerably. Furthermore, since variation in the VNTR pattern was seen not only between different isolates of M. leprae but also between biopsy samples from the same patient, these VNTR may be too dynamic for use as epidemiological markers for leprosy.Leprosy remains a public health problem, and on average, 400,000 new cases have been reported annually during the last 5 years (2), although there is no known reservoir for the etiologic agent, Mycobacterium leprae, other than human beings. In order to understand better the transmission and epidemiology of leprosy, several investigators have searched for polymorphic markers within the genome of M. leprae with the aim of developing robust molecular typing systems for epidemiology. Variable-number tandem repeats (VNTR), such as runs of di-or trinucleotides, have been examined as potential typing markers and found to vary in copy number between strains of M. leprae (7,12,16,19,24), thus arousing interest in their application as epidemiological tools. Other workers have investigated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) and found that despite the reductive evolution and genome decay undergone by the leprosy bacillus (3), the genome sequence is highly conserved and SNP are rare. Three SNP were found to be informative and have been used to reconstitute the evolution and global spread of M. leprae (12). While the SNP are useful in studies of long-range transmission of leprosy, the VNTR, owing to their more dynamic nature, appear more appropriate for monitoring the spread of M. leprae over shorter epidemiological distances, such as within a region or a large city. A number of reports have appeared that present the findings of VNTR studies of leprosy bacilli from different Asian countries (20, 25) and in one case from patients belonging to the same family (24). Here we present the findings of a study aimed at comparing the performance of three SNP and five VNTR markers in typing strains present in different biopsy samples from the same leprosy patients living in Mali.