| Literature DB >> 25183962 |
Om Prakash Singh1, Shyam Sundar1.
Abstract
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is a vector-borne chronic infectious disease caused by the protozoan parasite Leishmania donovani or Leishmania infantum. VL is a serious public health problem, causing high morbidity and mortality in the developing world with an estimated 0.2-0.4 million new cases each year. In the absence of a vaccine, chemotherapy remains the favored option for disease control, but is limited by a narrow therapeutic index, significant toxicities, and frequently acquired resistance. Improved understanding of VL pathogenesis offers the development and deployment of immune based treatment options either alone or in combination with chemotherapy. Modulations of host immune response include the inhibition of molecular pathways that are crucial for parasite growth and maintenance; and stimulation of host effectors immune responses that restore the impaired effector functions. In this review, we highlight the challenges in treatment of VL with a particular emphasis on immunotherapy and targeted therapies to improve clinical outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: IL-10; anti-IL-10 mAb; immunotherapy; resistance; treatment; visceral leishmaniasis
Year: 2014 PMID: 25183962 PMCID: PMC4135235 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2014.00296
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Current VL treatments with anti-leishmanial drugs: their mode(s) of action on parasites, dosage, efficacy, advantages and limitations.
| Drugs | Mode(s) of action | Dosage | Efficacy (%) | Advantages | Limitations | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pentavalent antimonials: sodium stibogluconate (Pentostam) or meglumine antimoniate (Glucantime) | Acts as pro-drug that is converted to active and more toxic trivalent form within the amastigote/macrophage; and this active trivalent SbIII form inhibits trypanothione reductase and exposes parasite to oxidative stress of the host | 20 mg/kg/day (i.m.) for 20–30 days in India | 80–90 (50% in Bihar, India) | Low cost and easily availability in endemic area | Pancreatitis, cardiac arrhythmias, acquired resistance in the Indian subcontinent | ( |
| 2 | Amphotericin B (Fungizone) | Form complexes and bind to ergosterol in parasite membranes that create pores, which alter ion balance, increase membrane permeability resulting in cell death; also acts as an inhibitor of ergosterol biosynthesis | 0.75–1.0 mg/kg for 15–20 infusions either daily on alternate days in India (i.v) | >95% | Effective in antimony resistant regions, primary resistance is unknown | High cost and need of prolonged hospitalization, rigor, and fever with renal complications, hypokalemia | ( |
| 3 | Liposomal amphotericin B (AmBisome) | Targeted delivery of drug to the infected macrophage and mechanism of action is same as amphotericin | 3.0 mg/kg/day for 5 days (total 15 mg) OR 10 mg/kg as a single dose, i.v | >96% | Highly effective, low toxicity, resistance is not documented | High cost | ( |
| 4 | Paromomycin (aminoglycoside antibiotic), also known as aminosidine | Exact mechanism is not known. In bacteria, inhibits protein synthesis, but in | 11 mg/kg of base/day for 21 days (i.m.) | 95% | Acts synergistically with antimonials, effective, well tolerated, and cheapest drug for VL | Reversible ototoxicity but no nephrotoxicity, lack of efficacy in East Africa | ( |
| 5 | Miltefosine | Interacts with the cell membrane of | 50 mg/day for adults <25 kg and 100 mg/day >50 kg adults (oral) | 85–95% | First oral drug for VL. Currently first line of treatment in Indian subcontinent | Potentially teratogenic, vomiting, and diarrhea with occasional hepatic and renal toxicity | ( |
| 6 | Pentamidine | Accumulate in parasite mitochondria and inhibit mitochondrial topoisomerase II, binding to AT-rich sites in the minor groove of DNA followed by inhibition of transcription process | 4 mg/kg/day for three times weekly for 15–20 dose (i.m or i.v) | 70–80% | Low efficacy, toxic. May be used in combination with other drugs | Gastrointestinal side effects, cardiac, arrhythmias, hypotension, pancreatitis, and irreversible insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus | ( |
Immunotherapy of human leishmaniasis.
| Country | Year | Immunotherapeutic agent | Chemotherapeutic | No. of | Disease/ | Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| agent | patients | parasite | efficacy | ||||
| India | 1995 | IFN-γ | Sbv | 16 | VL | 87% | ( |
| Brazil | 1990 | IFN-γ | Sbv | 17 | VL | 82.3% | ( |
| Brazil | 2005 | GM-CSF | Sbv | 05 | CL | 100% Cure | ( |
| Brazil | 2006 | Killed | Glucantime | 47 | ACL | 87% | ( |
| Brazil | 2006 | Mixed antigens | – | 06 | MCL | 76–94% | ( |
| Brazil | 2002 | Killed | Meglumine | 47 | ACL | 100% | ( |
| Argentina | 2011 | Killed | – | 01 | ACL | High | ( |
| Peru | 2007 | Imiquimod | Sbv | 07 | CL | 72% | ( |
| Kenya | 1993 | IFN-γ | Sbv | 10 | VL | 75% | ( |
| Sudan | 2008 | Alum/ALM + BCG | Sbv | 15 | PKDL | 87% | ( |
| Iran | 2006 | Imiquimod | Glucantime | 59 | CL | 44.1% | ( |
| Uzbekistan | 1993 | Leukinferon (i.m.) | Monomycin | 50 | CL | High | ( |
| Venezuela | 1990–1999 | Pasteurized | – | 5341 | CL | 91.2–98.7% | ( |
| Venezuela | 1994–2000 | Mixture antigens | Sbv | 87 | CL | Moderate | ( |
| Venezuela | 2004 | Pasteurized | – | 07 | MCL, DCL | 100% | ( |
VL, visceral leishmaniasis; CL, cutaneous leishmaniasis; MCL, mucocutaneous leishmaniasis; DCL, diffuse cutaneous leishmaniasis; PKDL, post kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis; BCG, bacillus Calmette–Guerin; Sb, sodium stiboguconate; IFN-γ, interferon-γ; mixture antigens
a: TSA, thiol-specific antioxidant; LmSTI1, L. major stress inducible protein 1; LeIF, Leishmania elongation initiation factor; Lbhsp83, Leishmania heat shock protein 83; GM-CSF, granulocyte macrophage colony-stimulating factor; mixture antigens
.