| Literature DB >> 24982655 |
Bruno Mendes Roatt1, Rodrigo Dian de Oliveira Aguiar-Soares2, Wendel Coura-Vital3, Henrique Gama Ker3, Nádia das Dores Moreira2, Juliana Vitoriano-Souza2, Rodolfo Cordeiro Giunchetti4, Cláudia Martins Carneiro3, Alexandre Barbosa Reis1.
Abstract
LEISHMANIASIS HAS SEVERAL CLINICAL FORMS: self-healing or chronic cutaneous leishmaniasis or post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis; mucosal leishmaniasis; visceral leishmaniasis (VL), which is fatal if left untreated. The epidemiology and clinical features of VL vary greatly due to the interaction of multiple factors including parasite strains, vectors, host genetics, and the environment. Human immunodeficiency virus infection augments the severity of VL increasing the risk of developing active disease by 100-2320 times. An effective vaccine for humans is not yet available. Resistance to chemotherapy is a growing problem in many regions, and the costs associated with drug identification and development, make commercial production for leishmaniasis, unattractive. The toxicity of currently drugs, their long treatment course, and limited efficacy are significant concerns. For cutaneous disease, many studies have shown promising results with immunotherapy/immunochemotherapy, aimed to modulate and activate the immune response to obtain a therapeutic cure. Nowadays, the focus of many groups centers on treating canine VL by using vaccines and immunomodulators with or without chemotherapy. In human disease, the use of cytokines like interferon-γ associated with pentavalent antimonials demonstrated promising results in patients that did not respond to conventional treatment. In mice, immunomodulation based on monoclonal antibodies to remove endogenous immunosuppressive cytokines (interleukin-10) or block their receptors, antigen-pulsed syngeneic dendritic cells, or biological products like Pam3Cys (TLR ligand) has already been shown as a prospective treatment of the disease. This review addresses VL treatment, particularly immunotherapy and/or immunochemotherapy as an alternative to conventional drug treatment in experimental models, canine VL, and human disease.Entities:
Keywords: Leishmania donovani; Leishmania infantum; immunochemotherapy; immunology; immunotherapy; visceral leishmaniasis
Year: 2014 PMID: 24982655 PMCID: PMC4055865 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Recommendations of the World Health Organization for the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis per geographic region ranked by preference [World Health Organization (.
| Liposomal amphotericin B: 3–5 mg/kg daily over 3–5 days to a total dose of 15 mg/kg by infusion or 10 mg/kg as a single dose |
| Combination therapy (co-administered following the sequence): (i) liposomal amphotericin B (5 mg/kg by infusion, single dose) + miltefosine (daily for 7 days, dosage as below), (ii) liposomal amphotericin B (5 mg/kg by infusion, single dose) + paromomycin (daily for 10 days, dosage as below), (iii), miltefosine + paromomycin both for 10 days (dosages as below) |
| Amphotericin B deoxycholate: 0.75–1.0 mg/kg daily or on alternate days for 15–20 doses by infusion |
| Miltefosine: children aged 2–11 years, 2.5 mg/kg daily; 12 years and older <25 kg body weight, 50 mg/day; 25–50 kg, 100 mg/day; >50 kg, 150 mg/day; orally for 28 days |
| Paromomycin: 15 mg (11 mg base)/kg/day by intramuscular route for 21 days |
| Pentavalent antimonials: 20 mg SbV/kg/day intramuscularly or by infusion for 30 days (areas where they are effective: Bangladesh, Nepal, and the Indian states of Jharkhand, West Bengal, and Uttar Pradesh) |
| Combination therapy: pentavalent antimonials (20 mg SbV/kg/day intramuscularly or by infusion) + paromomycin [15 mg (11 mg base)/kg/day by intramuscular route] for 17 days |
| Pentavalent antimonials: same treatment scheme as above |
| Liposomal amphotericin B: 3–5 mg/kg daily given over 6–10 days for a total dose of 30 mg/kg by infusion |
| Amphotericin B deoxycholate: same treatment scheme as above |
| Miltefosine: same treatment scheme as above |
| Liposomal amphotericin B: 3–5 mg/kg daily over 3–6 days for a total dose of 18–21 mg/kg by infusion |
| Pentavalent antimonials: 20 mg SbV/kg/day intramuscularly or by infusion for 28 days |
| Amphotericin B deoxycholate: 0.75–1.0 mg/kg daily or on alternate days for 10–20 doses by infusion (total dose: 2–3 g) |
Cost of visceral leishmaniasis treatment (patient weighing 35 kg).
| Medicine (compound) | Treatment regimen in days | Drug cost in US$ |
|---|---|---|
| L-Amb 10 mg/kg | 1 | 125 |
| L-Amb 20 mg/kg | 2–4 | 250 |
| Amphotericin B deoxycholate 1 mg/kg (alternating days) | 30 | 20 |
| MF 100 mg/kg | 28 | 65–150 |
| PM 15 mg/kg/day | 21 | 15 |
| SSG 20 mg/kg/day | 30 | 55 |
| MA 20 mg/kg/day | 30 | 59 |
| L-Amb 5 mg/kg + MF 100 mg/kg | 8 | 88–109 |
| L-Amb 5 mg/kg + PM 15 mg/kg/day | 11 | 78 |
| MF 100 mg/kg + PM 15 mg/kg/day | 10 | 30–60 |
| SSG 20 mg + PM 15 mg/kg/day | 17 | 43 |
*Calculations for SSG and MF based on exchange rate of €1 = US$ 1.40 (December 2013). Price range of MF depends on order volume. Price is based on generic SSG, World Health Organization (.
L-Amb, liposomal amphotericin B; MF, miltefosine; PM, paromomycin; SSG, sodium stibogluconate; MA, meglumine antimoniate.
Immunotherapy and immunochemotherapy strategies against VL for humans and dogs.
| Immunotherapeutic agent | Chemotherapy agent | Visceral disease | Improvements | Treatment efficacy | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IFN-γ | SbV | Human | Accelerated parasitological control, enhanced the clinical efficacy of conventional SbV treatment, 83.2% cure rate | Marked | ( |
| IFN-γ for 15 or 30 days (107 U/mg/day) | SbV (20 mg/kg/day) at 30 days | Human | No difference was observed in patients treated with SbV alone | Moderate | ( |
| IFN-γ | SbV (20 mg/kg/day) at 30 days | Human | All patients responded clinically to treatment, more quickly splenic culture-negative | Moderate | ( |
| Antigenic preparation of | 100 mg/kg SC of | Canine | Increase in the T lymphocytes, especially CD4/TcRαβ+ and CD4/CD45RA+ cells in PBMC; reduction of infection to | Low | ( |
| Enriched-Leishmune® vaccine (plus 0.5 mg of saponin) | n.d. | Canine | Higher levels of anti-FML IgG (IgG2), positive delayed type hypersensitivity reaction, lower clinical scores | Moderate | ( |
| Enriched-Leishmune® vaccine (plus 0.5 mg of saponin) | Allopurinol (10 mg/kg) and amphotericin B (0.5 mg/kg) | Canine | Positive DTH reaction, reduction of symptomatic cases and low numbers of animals with parasites in lymph nodes and deaths | Marked | ( |
| Vaccine composed by 20 μg of rLeish-110f® + 25 μg of MPL-SE® | 100 mg/kg/day IM of Glucantime® | Canine | Improvement in the clinical parameters (hematological, biochemical, cellular); reduction in parasitological positive animals (bone marrow smears or culture); reduced number of deaths; 33% xenodiagnosis negative of by PCR | Marked | ( |
| Vaccine composed by 20 μg of Leish-111f® plus 20 μg of MPL-SE® | 20 mg/kg/day IV of Glucantime® | Canine | Cure rates 50%; 92% clinical improvement | Moderate | ( |
| Immunomodulator P-MAPA (2.0 mg/kg) intramuscularly | n.d. | Canine | Increase CD8+ T cells, IL-2, and IFN-γ; decrease in IL-10 and improvement in clinical signs and reduction in parasite load in skin | Marked | ( |
SC, subcutaneous; IM, intramuscular; IV, intravenous; n.d., not done.