| Literature DB >> 30410407 |
José Angelo Lauletta Lindoso1,2,3, Carlos Henrique Valente Moreira1,4, Mirella Alves Cunha5, Igor Thiago Queiroz6,7.
Abstract
Visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is caused by Leishmania donovani and Leishmania infantum. The burden of VL is concentrated in tropical and subtropical areas; however, HIV infection has spread VL over a hyperendemic area. Several outcomes are observed as a result of VL-HIV coinfection. Impacts are observed in immunopathogenesis, clinical manifestation, diagnosis, and therapeutic response. Concerning clinical manifestation, typical and unusual manifestation has been observed during active VL in HIV-infected patient, as well as alteration in immunoresponse, inducing greater immunosuppression by low CD4 T-lymphocyte count or even by induction of immunoactivation, with cell senescence. Serological diagnosis of VL in the HIV-infected is poor, due to low humoral response, characterized by antibody production, so parasitological methods are more recommended. Another important and even more challenging point is the definition of the best therapeutic regimen for VL in HIV-coinfected patients, because in this population there is greater failure and consequently higher mortality. The challenge of better understanding immunopathogenesis in order to obtain more effective therapies is one of the crucial points to be developed. The combination of drugs and the use of secondary prophylaxis associated with highly active antiretroviral therapy may be the best tool for treatment of HIV coinfection. Some derivatives from natural sources have action against Leishmania; however, studies have been limited to in vitro evaluation, without clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV infection; diagnosis; therapeutic response; visceral leishmaniasis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30410407 PMCID: PMC6197215 DOI: 10.2147/HIV.S143929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HIV AIDS (Auckl) ISSN: 1179-1373
Main methods used for the diagnosis of visceral leishmaniasis in patients coinfected with HIV according to sensitivity and specificity
| Laboratory method | Brief Description | Sensitivity | Specificity | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microscopic examination (bone- marrow aspiration) | Microscopic demonstration of amastigote forms | 93.2% | 100% | Not expensive; invasive method; great specificity and sensitivity |
| –Giemsa staining | ||||
| DAT | Agglutination serological test | 81% | 90% | Better performance of serological methods |
| rk39 rapid test | Immunochromatographic test using recombinant K39 antigen | 46.6–81% | 96–100% | Easy and rapid method; great sensitivity and specificity |
| ELISA | Enzyme immunoassay using total antigens | 50–60% | 90% | Easy method; variable sensitivity and specificity, depending on antigens; positivity in asymptomatic individuals from endemic area |
| IFAT | Immunofluorescence to detect antibodies anti-leishmania | 51–61% | 93% | Easy method; variable sensitivity and specificity, depending on antigens; positivity in asymptomatic individuals from endemic area |
| PCR | Molecular method using specific targets | 87.2–98% | 96% | High sensitivity and specificity; not available in all regions; frequently expensive |
Abbreviations: DAT, direct agglutination test; IFAT, immunofluorescence antibody test.
Main drugs used to treat visceral leishmaniasis in HIV-coinfected patients, according to dose and efficacy
| Treatment | Dosage | Efficacy/cure rate | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liposomal amphotericin B | 6×5 mg/kg/day on alternate days – total dose 30 mg/kg | Parasitological response: 59.5% initial response; 38% effectiveness for visceral leishmaniasis relapses | Ritmeijer et al, 2011 |
| Miltefosine | 100 mg/day for 28 days | Parastiological response: 64% initial response, with short follow-up (median duration of disease-free interval 4–5 months) | Sindermann et al, 2004 |
| Combination therapy | |||
| Liposomal amphotericin plus miltefosine | 30 mg/kg divided in 6 equal dose on alternate days + 50 mg twice or 50 mg once daily | Eight relapses out 100 patients discharged after intial cure | Mahajan et al, 2015 |
Notes:
Contraindicated in HIV-infected patients due to toxicities and unacceptable death rate.
Different criteria to cure definition.