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J Infect Chemother (2004) 10:307–315 DOI 10.1007/s10156-004-0348-9 © Japanese Society of Chemotherapy and The Japanese Association for Infectious Diseases 2004 REVIEW ARTICLE Sarman Singh · Ramu Sivakumar Challenges and new discoveries in the treatment of leishmaniasis Received: July 26, 2004 / Accepted: September 16, 2004 Abstract Leishmaniasis is a parasitic disease caused by a hemoflagellate, Leishmania spp. The parasite is transmitted by the bite of an infected female phlebotomine sandfly. The disease is prevalent throughout the world and in at least 88 countries. Human leishmanial infections may manifest in any of the four most common forms. Depending on the causative species, it can manifest as cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL), diffused cutaneous leishmaniasis (DCL), or visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Although there are nearly 25 compounds having antileishmanial effects, only a few are used for humans and most of these are parenteral. The oldest was urea stibamine, developed in India in 1922. The original drug had severe toxic effects, and later on its pentavalent compounds were prepared, which remained the sole treatment modality for several decades and saved millions of lives. However, reports of unresponsiveness to pentavalent sodium antimony gluconate (SAG) started in the 1970s, and in some parts of India about a quarter of kala-azar cases are reported to have developed resistance even to its higher doses. This development led to successful clinical trials of pentamidine and amphotericine B. The latter, an antifungal compound, was also found to be highly nephrotoxic, and to minimize these side effects various colloidal and lipid formulations have been prepared. These preparations are comparatively safe but are exorbitantly costly. In the past two decades, more focus has been given to finding oral drugs to minimize injection-associated complications, including blood-borne infection. Various drugs were reported effective, including antifungal ketoconazole. However, the most promising drug found is an anticancer compound, miltefosine, that belongs to the alkylphosphocholine group. The drug has undergone experimental and clinical trials and found to be 94%–97% effective. However, the drug cannot be given S. Singh (*) · R. Sivakumar Division of Clinical Microbiology, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, P.O. Box 4938, New Delhi, India Tel. ⫹91-11-26588484/26594977; Fax ⫹91-11-26588641/26588663 e-mail: [email protected] during pregnancy and shows severe gastrointestinal side effects. Moreover, its cost will be another limiting factor. Other drugs such as paromomycin, allopurinol, and sitamaquine have been reported with variable cure rates. Because of these limitations, a combination therapy, preferably coupled with specific parasite enzyme inhibitors, is the only hope. Key words Kala-Azar · Sodium antimony gluconate · Amphotericin B · Miltefosine · Edelfosine · HIV Introduction Leishmaniasis is a vector-borne parasitic disease caused by a hemoflagellate, Leishmania spp., that is transmitted by the bite of an infected phlebotomine sandfly. Leishmaniasis is prevalent throughout the world, in at least 88 countries. More than 90 percent of the cutaneous cases appear in Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Brazil, Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Sudan, whereas more than 90% of visceral cases appear in India and Sudan. The mucocutaneous form is mostly found in Latin America.1,2 Approximately 350 million people live in the area of active parasite transmission.1,2 Historically, the visceral form of leishmaniasis or kala-azar had been known by various other names in the 19th century, such as Jessore fever, Kala-dukh, Sarkari Beemari, Burdwan fever, and fatal fever. The earliest kala-azar epidemic, which occurred in 1824 in the Jessore district of India (now in Bangladesh), was confused with malaria and the disease was named Jessore fever; however, the clinical manifestations as inscribed in Indian history suggest that the disease was visceral leishmaniasis. Later epidemics of similar disease occurred in Bengal in the years 1832, 1857, 1871, 1877, and 1899. In Assam, kala-azar epidemics occurred in 1885, 1897, 1913, 1925, 1944, and 1963. Bihar, which is the present focus of this disease, had several epidemics earlier also. However, the first epidemic correlated retrospectively in Bihar was in 1882–1885, 1917, 1933, and 1939. After independence, although kala-azar never dis- 308 appeared completely, after introduction of the National Malaria Eradication Programme in 1955–1960 the number of kala-azar cases decreased drastically.3–5 Unfortunately, due to the cessation of DDT spraying in Bihar, the disease reappeared in Bihar in 1977 and millions of people developed kala-azar in Bihar alone.3–5 The disease has been rampant and endemic since then in India as a whole and particularly in Assam, West Bengal, Bihar, and eastern Uttar Pradesh (UP), with an east to west shifting trend. This epidemic turned into an endemic form and continues to take the lives of several million people, resulting in unimaginable economic loss to the state and to the country.5,6 in Spain and France. A review of current literature found that 20%–40% of cases had an absence of splenomegaly.8 In India, where mucocutaneous leishmaniasis has not been reported so far, healed visceral leishmaniasis may manifest as mucocuaneous leishmaniasis involving the oral cavity, nasal mucosa, conjunctiva, and tongue. Leishmania amastigotes are commonly found in Kaposi’s sarcoma and herpes zoster lesions concomitant with VL in AIDS patients. Leishmaniasis has also been reported presenting as a dermatomyositis-like eruption in three patients with AIDS.1,8 Causative agent and vector Clinical manifestations Human leishmanial infections may manifest in four most common forms. Depending on the causative species, it can manifest as cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), mucocutaneous leishmaniasis (MCL), diffused cutaneous leishmaniasis (DCL), or visceral leishmaniasis (VL). Visceral leishmaniasis is also commonly known as kala-azar, which is characterized by prolonged fever with or without double peaks, anemia, loss of appetite and weight, and gross hepatosplenomegaly. If untreated, the peculiarity of Indian kala-azar is that the skin of the patient becomes darkened, from which is derived its name, kala (blackening)-azar (fever).5 Although the infection produces only moderate toxic symptoms, due to severe weight loss, anemia, and systemic impairment, the patient dies. The fatality rate is almost 100% in children and females from poor families.5,6 Approximately 2%–5% successfully treated cases of kalaazar develop cutaneous sequelae, which are characterized by hypopigmentation with or without maculopapular lesions on the skin. This sequela is seen a few months or years after a kala-azar cure or sometimes even simultaneously.7 This condition is known as post-kala-azar-dermal leishmaniasis (PKDL). Recently, apart from visceralizing species of Leishmania, visceralization by dermotropic species of this parasite has also been reported as a complication of immunosuppressive conditions such as acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Because human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-1 is a frequent cause of immunosuppression, an increasing number of cases of HIV–Leishmania coinfection are being described from areas where both infections overlap. HIV modifies the clinical presentation of all form of leishmaniasis in the coinfected patients. Several atypical etiological agents have been described in leishmanial syndromes affecting HIV-infected subjects. In HIV-associated leishmaniasis, parasitic dissemination throughout the reticuloendothelial system by the nonvisceralizing species and to atypical locations in the visceralizing syndrome are reported. Fulminant presentation of VL is frequent in patients with AIDS, and relapses are usual. We have encountered five HIV cases, all from the kala-azar endemic area, in whom the first clinical manifestation was leishmaniasis. VL is now the fourth most common opportunistic parasitic disease in HIV-positive individuals Kala-azar in India is caused by a parasite called Leishmania (donovani) donovani, which is a hemoflagellate. The parasite was reported by Leishman and Donovan in London and Madras, respectively, in the same year, 1903.1,2 Epidemiologically, infections may be zoonotic or anthroponotic, when animals and humans, respectively, serve as reservoirs. More than 25 species of Leishmania are capable of producing disease in humans. Since its recognition, extensive studies have shown that the Indian kala-azar is anthroponotic and is transmitted chiefly through the bites of the female sandfly, Phlebotomus argentipes. Occasional reports of transmittal through unscreened blood transfusions and transplacental transmission are also on record.1,2,8,9 Although several animal reservoirs for leishmaniasis have been identified in different countries, in India, no animal reservoir of the parasite is identified yet. In Europe, the Middle East, and Mediterranean countries, VL is caused by L. infantum whereas in the New World the causative agent is L. chagasi.1,2 Similarly, various species of Leishmania are responsible for causing cutaneous and mucocutaneous leishmaniasis; detailed description of their epidemiology is beyond the scope of this review. Treatment There are nearly 25 compounds having antileishmanial effects, but only a few are classified as antileishmanial drugs used for humans and most of these are parenteral. However, the first effective drug was ureastibamine, which was discovered in 1912 and was first reported to be effective against Leishmania donovani by Brahmchari of India in 1922. This discovery saved millions of lives of poor Indians, for which Prof. Brahmchari was nominated for the Nobel Prize in 1929 (Nobel Prize official website). Later on, the refinement and development of pentavalent antimonials [Sb(v)] reduced the side effects, and these compounds are still the mainstay of treating all forms of leishmaniasis. The most commonly used organic compounds of antimony (Sb) are sodium antimony gluconate (SAG) (manufactured by Albert-David of the UK) and meglumine antimoniate (manufactured by Rhone-Poulence, Paris). However, local manufacturers have been able to produce cost-effective 309 generic formulations in India. Although the precise mechanism of action is not fully known, the antimonials are known to inhibit glycolytic enzymes and fatty acid oxidation in Leishmania amastigotes, and there is a dose-dependent inhibition in net formation of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and guanosine triphosphate (GTP).4,10,11 These compounds continued to be used successfully to treat millions of patients throughout the world for almost a half century, but reports of unresponsiveness to the standard 10 mg/kg body weight (BW) of sodium stibogluconate started in the 1970s. Most of these cases were reported from India. However, the disease remained treatable with high doses of 20 mg/kg BW.11 During the last epidemic, which occurred in India in the 1980s, about a quarter of kala-azar cases were reported to have developed resistance even to the higher doses of sodium stibogluconate (SAG) and even to the second-line pentamidine therapy.11–13 Because most of the cases were treated with higher doses of SAG and were followed up during this epidemic, results of these studies demonstrated several side effects of this regimen.13–15 Gasser et al.14 also reported that Sb routinely causes pancreatitis during treatment and that pancreatic inflammation is probably the cause of the nausea and abdominal pain experienced by many patients. Other side effects of antimonial therapy include pancytopenia and reversible peripheral neuropathy.15 Although cardiotoxicity can occur with Sb treatment and may be the cause of sudden death, significant electrocardiographic changes (concave ST segments or QTC prolongation) do not occur in patients given single courses of Pentostam (20 mg/kg · day) for up to 28 days. However, the SAG produced in India had a comparatively higher rate of cardiotoxicity, probably a result of the longer duration of treatment and manufacturing quality.10,11,13,14 However, some authors thought that several manifestations considered to be side effects of antimonials could actually be the systemic manifestations of visceral leishmaniasis. Therefore, Berman13 in his review mentioned that systemic toxicity caused by the antimonials may be best determined in patients treated for mucocutaneous leishmaniasis, which is a nonsystemic disease. He cited a study in which, of the 29 Peruvian MCL patients treated with Pentostam for 28 days, 83% had myalgias and/or arthralgias, 28% had abdominal symptoms, and 21% had headache; 10% of patients had increased liver enzymes, but these enzyme levels declined in spite of continued therapy. None the less, this drug still remains the cheapest method of treating leishmaniasis in developing countries.13 Pentamidine To circumvent the problem of clinical resistance to Sb in India, pentamidine isethionate was tried for the treatment of visceral disease.16,17 This drug was primarily used for treating Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. The exact mechanism of action of pentamidine isethionate is not known, but some workers hypothesized that this polyamine compound 4 acts on the kinetoplast DNA and inhibits its functions. The pentamidine treatment was successfully used in the late 1970s and early 1980s by Jha,16 and a cure rate of 98.8% was reported without any relapse. The regimen consisted of 4 mg/kg given three times a week for 3–4 weeks (10–12 injections). However, the success rate started declining in the 1980s when even after 20 injections only 75.2% of patients were cured.10,11,17 The repeated administration of 2 mg pentamidine isethionate/kg every other day for 7 days was studied for the treatment of cutaneous disease in Colombia. This regimen was 96% effective. To decrease the dosing further, 2 mg/kg pentamidine was administered every other day for only 4 days, but this decreased the cure rate to 84%. However, a slightly higher dose (3 mg/kg/IM) administered on 4 alternate days resulted in a 96% cure rate for 51 evaluable patients.18 The low-dose, short-course regimens for cutaneous leishmaniasis commonly result in myalgias, pain at the injection site, nausea, and headache and less commonly result in a metallic taste, a burning sensation, numbness, and hypotension. Reversible hypoglycemia occurred in about 2% of cases. The incidence and severity of these side effects are higher when the high-dose, long-course regimens are used for treatment of visceral disease, as in India. However, it can be difficult to distinguish side effects that are due to pentamidine from those that are due to kala-azar or to Sb if it is administered concomitantly. Jha et al.17 reported a 20% incidence of tachycardia and/or hypotension and a 1% incidence of hyperglycemia among patients receiving pentamidine. Thakur10 reported a 10% incidence of hyperglycemia and an 8% incidence of hypoglycemia, but most of his patients received Sb in addition to pentamidine. Because of the higher rate of toxicity in pentamidine compared to Sb and recent reports of emergence of drug resistance to pentamidine in India, this drug is rarely being used for visceral disease in India. Moreover, the supply of pentamidine is only through government hospitals in India, which makes it less accessible to many patients. For cutaneous disease, the high cure rate associated with a low dose of pentamidine given for a short period makes it an attractive alternative to Sb and the treatment of choice in cases of fresh cases as well as Sb treatment failure cases.13 Amphotericin B and lipid-associated amphotericin B Amphotericin B is a polyene antifungal antibiotic agent, discovered in 1956, from a bacterium of genus Streptomyces. Amphotericin B binds to cell wall sterols but preferentially to ergosterol, which is the major cell membrane sterol of fungi as well as Leishmania, but not mammalian cell membranes. It selectively inhibits the membrane synthesis of the parasite and causes holes in the membrane, leading to parasite death. Hence, its use in the treatment of the leishmaniasis has a biochemical rationale. However, to a lesser extent it binds to human cell wall cholesterol, leading to its toxic effects. Before 1990, amphotericin B was administered infrequently because of its known infusion-related side effects 310 such as fever, chills, bone pain, and, rarely, cardiac arrest and delayed side effects such as hypokalemia and nephrotoxicity.13,19 Amphotericin B (deoxycholate) has been given to large numbers of patients with kala-azar that is clinically resistant to Pentostam and pentamidine. In Bihar, 99% of patients were cured with the standard regimen of 20 injections (1 mg/ kg/AD) of amphotericin B. Further studies showed that the duration of therapy could be reduced by administering the drug daily rather than every alternate day (AD) and that, in India, a dose of 1 mg/kg/day could be administered initially rather than incrementally.20,21 Mishra et al.22 found that the daily dose could be diminished from 1 mg/kg to 0.5 mg/kg/AD in patients who had not received Sb(v) for 14 days with a 100% cure rate. Thakur et al.21 found that amphotericin B could also be administered to children (1 mg/kg every other day, for a total of 20 injections), in whom the success rate was 100%. In addition, these authors found that amphotericin B was effective at a dosage of 1 mg/kg for 20 days, without apparent harm to the fetus, in five pregnant women. However, amphotericin B formulations are now being more widely used for visceral leishmaniasis and constitute the major advance in antileishmanial chemotherapy of the past two decades. The reasons for the increased use of amphotericin B are a greater demand due to the rise of kala-azar resistant to antimony and to pentamidine, coupled with its better formulations by various pharmaceutical companies, synthesized from different species of Streptomyces that are less toxic. In the new formulations, deoxycholate has been replaced by other lipids. These formulations include liposomal amphotericin B [L-AmB (Ambisome)],23,24 amphotericin B colloidal dispersion [ABCD (Amphocil)],25 and amphotericin B lipid complex [ABLC (Abelcet)].26 Davidson et al.23 from the UK reported the first clinical use of lipidassociated amphotericin B formulations for leishmaniasis in a patient who was cured with 50 mg of the drug (~1 mg/kg) given daily for 21 days. Other populations have also been treated with L-AmB. Ten Indian patients with kala-azar were cured with a dose of 2 mg/kg given on days 1, 5, and 10 (total dose, 6 mg/kg). In Sudan, a regimen of 3–5 mg/kg given on 3 days had a poorer cure rate than 3–5 mg/kg given for 6 days. This study showed that, at least under field conditions, a total dose of ⱕ12 mg/kg is not effective.13 The L-AmB is well tolerated by children. However, the success rate for HIV-infected patients is not better. Although patients are initially cured, half of them will have relapses.13,23 Although ABCD was the first formulation, only a few patients have received this formulation. In spite of its low dose for a short period and 100% success rate, the high incidence of infusion-related side effects such as chills, fever, and increased respiratory rate has limited its wider use.25 ABLC is the most recent formulation studied for the treatment of kala-azar. A dose of 3 mg/kg administered every other day for five injections was 100% successful to cure patients with antimony-resistant kala-azar. Infusionrelated toxicity occurred with this formulation also, and 50% of patients had chills and fever during the last infusion. The primary use of these formulations, which are exorbi- tantly priced, has remained limited to severe and resistant cases of visceral leishmaniasis, because several afore mentioned drugs are still effective for the nonvisceral disease forms.13,19 In spite of the fact that lipid-associated amphotericin B formulations are designed to replace amphotericin B, in the absence of comparative studies it is not yet clear whether lipid-associated amphotericin B should actually replace amphotericin B for the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis.13 Mishra et al.22 found that amphotericin B at a total dose of 7 mg/kg was highly effective in Indian patients with visceral leishmaniasis. As the recommended total dose of L-AmB is ~22 mg/kg in the UK, an effective dose of L-AmB in India is 6 mg/kg, the minimal effective dose of ABLC in India is ~10 mg/kg, and the minimal effective dose of ABCD in Brazil is ~10 mg/kg, it is not likely that the new formulations will be more effective than amphotericin B deoxycholate itself.13,22–26 The major advantage of the new formulations is that they are less toxic than amphotericin B; therefore, the total doses can be administered over a brief interval of 5–10 days. For clinical conditions where toxicity and duration of therapy are the major concerns, these formulations will be attractive propositions, but in situations where cost is a major concern, as in India, Nepal, and Bangladesh, the new formulation will be extremely costly and unsuitable. For these situations, amphotericin B or even SAG may still be preferred to the new and relatively expensive formulations. Paromomycin (aminosidine) Paromomycin is an aminoglycoside used for the treatment of bacterial diseases. However, paromomycin has also been found to have broad antiparasitic activity not shared by the other aminoglycosides. Oral paromomycin is recommended for the clinical treatment of intestinal amebic infections and tapeworm infections. Injectable paromomycin has been used for visceral leishmaniasis at dosages of 14–16 mg/ kg/day given for up to 3 weeks. This regimen showed a cure rate of 79%.27 Paromomycin in combination with stibogluconate has also been attempted successfully. The combination of paromomycin plus pentostam given for 20 days cured 82% of Indian patients. Similarly, in Sudan, paromomycin and pentostam reduced the total treatment period to almost half the usual duration of pentostam therapy.13 Injectable paromomycin has been used less successfully and even occasionally for the treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis. A combination of paromomycin and stibogluconate has also been used as therapy for the more serious syndrome of diffuse cutaneous disease. Because paromomycin is an aminoglycoside, it has potential for renal toxicity and eighth cranial nerve toxicity.13,28 Cytokines Badaro et al.29 first reported use of human recombinant interferon-γ as an adjunct antimony therapy for visceral 311 leishmaniasis. These investigators found that seven of nine cases of Sb-resistant kala-azar could be cured with the combination of interferon-γ given for 28 days. A subsequent trial showed that interferon-γ was only partially effective by itself.30 It was found that interferon-γ, in combination with Sb, could speed the elimination of parasites in previously untreated patients: both Kenyans and Indians experienced more rapid elimination of parasites when treated with the combination for 28 days than with antimony alone. The combination of interferon-γ and antimony was not as effective against Brazilian Sb-resistant disease as originally thought, but the combination did cure 9 (69%) of 13 patients with antimony-resistant visceral disease in India. However, 2 patients died of drug toxicity, perhaps because of the cumulative effect of previous therapy plus that of the combination therapy. Moreover, its price is exorbitantly high for a poor population.13,28–30 Oral agents All the aforementioned drugs are given parenterally, which has several disadvantages including hospitalization or multiple hospital visits, injection expenses, and injectionassociated transmission of blood-borne infections such as HIV and hepatitis B and C.31 Hence, oral treatment has an obvious appeal and advantage, particularly for cutaneous and post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis, which can be treated on an outpatient basis. Although more than 20 drugs have been studied or tried to treat leishmaniasis, only a few have been found effective.13,32–41 Allopurinol Allopurinol was the first oral drug. This hypoxanthine analogue inhibits purine catabolism in mammalian cells and purine anabolism in Leishmania. It works on the principle that Leishmania spp. are unable to synthesize purines. Allopurinol is hydrolyzed to allopurinol riboside, an analogue of inosine that is incorporated instead of ATP into leishmanial RNA. There it interferes with the normal protein synthesis (purine salvage cycle) of the parasite. Although allopurinol has been used to treat leishmaniasis for decades, a recent placebo-controlled double-blinded trial in Colombian patients of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. panamensis showed that allopurinol (20 mg/kg/day for 28 days) was no better than placebo. It was concluded that allopurinol monotherapy is ineffective against Colombian cutaneous disease and therefore is unlikely to be effective against other forms of leishmaniasis.13 Its efficacy against Indian kala-azar was first reported in 1983 by Jha.34 Imidazole derivatives Metronidazole and other imidazole derivatives as well as several other oral drugs have been studied as antileishmanial agents.32,33 Metronidazole eliminated only 30% of the parasites even when used at its peak serum levels (30 µg/ ml) after intravenous administration. However, ketoconazole was found effective against Leishmania. The principle quoted for using imidazoles as antileishmanial drugs was that the sterol composition of Leishmania species is similar to that of yeast and other fungi. Almost 3 years before the sterol structure of Leishmania was elucidated, it was shown that ketoconazole has an important action on sterol synthesis and led to the conclusion that ketoconazole affected ergosterol biosynthesis at one of the reaction sites. In a study from the United States, the antileishmanial activity of four imdiazole derivatives was determined in Leishmania tropica-infected human monocyte-derived macrophage cultures. The drugs used were miconazole, cotrimazole, ketoconazole, and hydrolyzed ketoconazole. The results showed that only hydrolyzed ketoconazole was the most effective drug that eliminated all parasites at a dose of 3.0 µg/ml and 80%–95% of the parasites at drug concentrations that are achievable. However, other derivatives were found ineffective or toxic.13,35–37 The mechanism of action of ketaconazole against Leishmania promastigotes is the same as for Candida albicans, i.e., interference with membrane permeability (cytochrome P450) secondary to loss of desmethyl sterols and accumulation of 14a-methyl sterols. These sterols have a detrimental effect on the membrane permeability and hence on the viability of the organism. Thus, the working hypothesis is that the accumulation of 14-methylsterols consequently leads to an alteration in the membrane fluidity and permeability. Weinrauch et al.35 reported on the use of ketoconazole (400 mg/day) for 28 days in eight patients with cutaneous lesions caused by L. major; five of these were cured. There are other reports of favorable response to ketoconoazole in cutaneous leishmaniasis of the Old World. Encouraged by the results with ketoconazole, the congener itraconazole has also been tried in patients with cutaneous leishmaniasis. Despite its varied use in cutaneous leishmaniasis, the efficacy of ketoconazole in visceral leishmaniasis was reported for the first time from India by our group.37 The initial report of this study showed ketoconazole to be efficacious in the treatment of kala-azar, and 80% of patients were cured with a regimen of ketoconazole 600 mg/ day for 28 days. However, others working in Bihar did not find it effective even at 400 mg/day.38 Our study on patients resistant to antimony or pentamidine therapy showed a consistently favorable outcome in which seven of nine patients had complete cure with 200 mg ketoconazole given thrice daily. The common side effect of ketoconazole we noticed was hepatotoxicity. Less commonly observed were endocrine dysfunction, reduction in cortisol levels, reduced cortisol response to corticotrophin, and, rarely, adrenal insufficiency, hyponatremia, confusion, and hypoadrenalism.37 Itraconazole is more easily tolerated than ketoconazole. In essentially uncontrolled studies, itraconazole (200 mg/ day given for 4–8 weeks) cured 15 (79%) of 19 patients from the Old World with cutaneous leishmaniasis and 10 (66%) of 15 patients from India. Akuffo et al.36 pointed out the requirement for controlled studies of Old World cutaneous 312 A new primaquine analogue, sitamaquine (WR 6026), was developed by Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (United States) originally for malaria and has no biochemical rationale. Although animal studies showed very encouraging results against visceral leishmaniasis, human trials done on Kenyan patients did not find it more than 50% effective in kala-azar treatment at 1 mg/kg/day for 28 days. In another study done on Brazilian patients using escalated doses, the optimum safe dose was 2 mg/kg/day for 28 days but the cure rate did not increase above 67%. The higher doses showed nephrotoxicity.39 and been approved by the World Health Organization for kala-azar treatment in India and for other forms of leishmaniasis. In a phase II multicentric clinical trial in which doses of 50 mg, 100 mg or 150 mg/day of miltefosine in adult patients were tried, of 120 patients, 114 patients had complete cure while 6 (5%) patients had relapses within 6 months.43 Miltefosine is an effective and safe treatment for immunocompetent adult male patients at the 100 mg/day dose, with an overall cure rate of 97% in VL patients and 94% in new World CL.The major side effects noticed were gastrointestinal disturbances. Other side effects were elevated liver enzymes and renal toxicity.43–46 In a phase III clinical trial concluded recently on a large group of patients, the study showed an initial cure rate of 100%, but the final cure rate after 6 months was only 94% of patients cured compared to a 97% cure rate for amphotericin B-treated cases. The major side effects in this trial were also gastrointestinal, vomiting (38%) and diarrhea (20%) at the 100 mg/day dose for 28 days.44 However, very recently unresponsive strains of Leishmania spp. have been reported against this drug too.47,48 Alkylphosphocholine analogues Local therapeutic agents Recently, two compounds of the alkylphosphocholine group developed by Zentaris (Frankfurt, Germany) have been found to have antineoplastic activity, and the mode of action involves protein kinase C. The knowledge of this protein kinase C enzyme being present on the plasma membrane of Leishmania led some investigators to try these compounds on cutaneous leishmaniasis.40,41 These compounds were found to be well absorbed from the intestinal tract and have more potent action than by the parentral route. The preliminary studies on Leishmania major skin lesions showed encouraging results. In this study, two compounds from the alkylphosphocholine group, hexadecylphosphocholine [HePC (present trade name, Miltefosin)] and Octadecyl-phosphocholine (DoPC), were evaluated for their antileishmanial activity in the mouse model of cutaneous leishmaniasis as local therapy. Although both compounds healed the lesions within 30 days, the lesions relapsed in DoPC-treated animals whereas HePC-treated animals showed a complete cure.42 To advance further, the effect of these compounds was also studied in vitro on L. donovani strains from India for the first time. HePC demonstrated a high degree of parasiticidal action on all five Indian strains: DD8, RMRI68, SS, AG83, and UR6, and all promastigotes died within 48 h of exposure.42 The inhibitory or lethal effects of these two compounds on L. donovani were compared with sodium antimony gluconate (SAG) and pentamidine isothionate. Encouragingly, with these results, the animal studies also indicated that these compounds were highly effective for visceral leishmaniasis.42 The drugs were tolerated well by the animals with only minor noticeable side effects such as 10% loss of weight and sluggishness.42 Hexa-decylphosphocholine or miltefosine has now successfully undergone clinical trials Local threatment of superficial tegumentary diseases such as cutaneous leishmaniasis is undoubtedly preferable because of the ease of drug administration and its appropriateness for outpatient use. Also, absorption of the drug into the circulation and risk of systemic toxicity are minor. Intralesional administration of antileishmanial agents is a method of treatment that has been used for decades; in two recent reports (one containing ⬎1000 cases), investigators reiterate that there is a cure rate of ~75% with intralesional Sb(v) therapy.49,50 This technique is effective; however, the injections are administered intermittently over ~1 month, each lesion has to be injected individually, and there are no data on large series from the New World.50,51 Major emphasis has been placed on topical application of paromomycincontaining formulations. El-On et al.49 showed, in Israel, that L. major lesions treated with 15% paromomycin plus 12% methylbenzethonium chloride in soft white paraffin twice a day for 10 days cleared more rapidly (cure rate, 100% at 21–30 days) than did untreated lesions on the same patients (cure rate, 100% at 51–60 days), and this formulation has now been marketed in Israel. In the New World, this formulation was reported to be highly effective in Ecuador, where 90% of 52 patients were cured 100 days after therapy; however, the trial was uncontrolled, and the natural cure rate in Ecuador can be 75%.51 In Colombia, investigators studied the combination of topical paromomycin (15%) and methylbenzethonium chloride (5%) plus a short course of parenteral glucantime because it was believed that the topical agent by itself was unlikely to be effective and that the systemic agent might clear parasites that had already disseminated from the cutaneous site. The cure rate was low for patients given the topical agent for 10 days plus glucantime for 3 day [8 (42%) of 19 patients were leishmaniasis; these investigators found in a small doubleblinded study that itraconazole (200 mg/day for 4 weeks) was not better than placebo.36 Another azole derivative, fluconazole, is inactive in vitro. Therapeutic studies done in India on kala-azar patients using a dose of 6 mg/kg/day for 30 days showed apparent clinical and parasitological cure in only 50% of cases, but these had relapses within 2 months.38 Sitamaquine 313 cured], but the rate was high for patients given the topical agent for 10 days plus glucantime for 7 days [18 (90%) of 20 patients were cured]. These results showed that the topical agent by itself would not be appreciably effective in Colombia but that the combination of the topical agent and a weeklong course of meglumine was as effective as had been found historically for a standard 20-day course of glucantime.51–54 Nevertheless, the usefulness of a topical agent plus a short course of Sb(v) remains to be confirmed in a controlled trial.13 Because there is an appreciable rate of local reaction to the paromomycin/methylbenzethonium chloride formulation, in that 25% of patients develop a burning sensation and pruritis and 15% develop vesicles, another formulation has been developed in which methylbenzethonium chloride has been replaced by 10% urea. Although 10% paromomycin ⫹ 10% urea administered for ⱕ12 weeks cured 23 (85%) of 27 patients with Old World leishmaniasis in an open study, this formulation, administered for 2 weeks, was no more effective than placebo in controlled trials for L. major disease. In Tunisia and in Iran, the percentage of treated patients who were cured at 4.5 weeks and at 3 weeks after treatment was virtually identical to the percentage who were cured in the placebo group. The results of these controlled trials show that the paromomycin/urea ointment is ineffective when administered for 14 days and that the natural cure rate for Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis can be high 15 weeks after medical attention has been sought. It is possible that the paromomycin/urea formulation might be effective if it is administered for longer than 2 weeks. However, a longer treatment period will make it more difficult to show a cure rate that is different from that for placebo and will make the regimen less attractive. The use of commercially available topical imidazole creams is financially attractive and is a biochemically rational approach. Topical miconazole (2%) and topical clotrimazole (1%) were administered twice a day for 30 days to patients in Saudi Arabia. However, 1 month after therapy only 16% of clotrimazole-treated lesions had fully healed, and none of the miconazole-treated lesions had fully healed.13,51–54 The fundamental problem with local treatment for cutaneous leishmaniasis is that this disease is not a superficial problem as are infections due to the dermatophytes. Leishmania amastigotes reside deep in the dermis and also disseminate to the lymphatic system and mucosal membranes. For successful treatment of cutaneous lesions with local injections, the drug has to deeply infiltrate the lesion, which is difficult to achieve in a standardized manner, particularly for Western clinicians who rarely treat this diseases. Even when topical agents are effective in vitro, they also must penetrate deeply to be effective against cutaneous lesions. Even a huge concentration of agent and a vehicle designed to aid penetration may not be sufficient to achieve the necessary penetration. For example, the concentration of paromomycin in the paromomycin/urea formulation is 15 000 µg/ml, whereas a 100% lethal dose of paromomycin in vitro is 10 µg/ml; although urea is added as an aid to penetration, the paromomycin ⫹ urea formulation has so far been ineffective in controlled trials. An additional major concern about the use of local therapy is that it should not cure lymph node infection or protect against mucosal disease if metastasis has already started. In spite of these problems, it is possible to conceive of strategies by which virtually all cutaneous disease could be topically treated. An effective topical agent would be the treatment of choice for L. major and L. (mexicana) mexicana infections, which generally do not disseminate. Topical treatment would also be appropriate for cutaneous disease that relapses after systemic therapy is administered, because nascent metastasis would probably be eliminated by the systemic agent. A topical agent in combination with short-course systemic therapy might be appropriate for cutaneous disease that has or is likely to have already disseminated.13 Although theoretically all cutaneous diseases could be treated with a topical agent or their combinations with short-course systemic therapy, proving that such a regimen is effective will require careful clinical studies. A high cure rate for infections due to L. major and L. (mexicana) mexicana will be simple to demonstrate in an uncontrolled experiment but difficult to differentiate from rapid natural cure rates. A high cure rate for disease due to L. braziliensis complex will be difficult to achieve. Combination therapy After increasing unresponsiveness to most of the monotherapeutic regimens, the combination therapy has found new scope in the treatment of both cutaneous and visceral leishmaniases.55–59 Recently, combination therapy with sodium antimony gluconate (SAG) and indolylquinoline derivative A [2–2(2⬙-dichloroacetamidobenzyle)3-(39-indolylquinoline)] showed 100% clearance of the parasites from liver and spleen of the hamsters as compared to 93% and 80%, respectively, when indolylquinoline derivative A and SAG were used singly.57 Similarly, the combination of low dosage pentamidine and allopurinol was more effective in achieving an ultimate cure in 91.25% of kala-azar patients as compared to 74.35% using pentamidine alone.58,59 All monotherapies of cutaneous leishmaniasis are less effective as compared to topical paromomycin plus methylbenzethonim chloride, curing 85.7%–91.4% cases. Other drugs tried are atovaquone, roxithromycin, and edelfosine.55–57 Bryceson55 suggests that drugs that have a long half-life and low therapeutic ratio, e.g., miltefosine, may induce drug resistance; therefore, such drugs should be used only in combination with another drug that has a short half-life and greater therapeutic ratio. HIV–leishmania coinfection In HIV-associated leishmaniasis, parasitic dissemination to the skin in DCL, or throughout the reticuloendothelial system by the nonvisceralizing species, and to atypical locations in visceralizing syndromes is reported.60 Leishmania amastigotes are commonly found in Kaposi’s sarcoma and 314 herpes zoster cutaneous lesions concomitant with VL. Fulminant presentation of VL is possible in patients with AIDS, and relapses are usual. A review of current literature found that 20%–40% of cases had absence of splenomegaly. Lack of anti-Leishmania antibodies is a characteristic feature seen in these patients.61,62 General treatment of leishmaniasis is indicated for each clinical presentation, although localized cutaneous lesions may benefit from topical and/or intralesional therapy as well. Tortajada et al.63 followed an HIV-infected cohort of 3589 patients from 1985 to 2000. Forty-five cases of visceral leishmaniasis were diagnosed at a mean CD4 count of 97.78% and previously had an AIDS-defining illness. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) was protective against leishmaniasis. Six deaths were associated with leishmaniasis among patients without access to HAART. The probability of HAART patients remaining free of relapse was 66% compared to 10% for those not treated with HAART. The trend toward fewer relapses is attributed to immune restoration due to HAART. Future perspectives Although several drugs are in use for treating leishmaniasis, a novel drug is yet to come. All drugs have some limitations including unaffordable cost and toxicity. Mechanism of drug resistance and interspecies variation in drug susceptibility are also important areas to explore. Drug susceptibility in relation to genetic heterogeneity in Leishmania species and strains is another area of interest. Efforts should be made to develop drugs that target well-characterized genes essential for survival of the parasite selectively, such as topoisomerase-II, reported recently by Das et al.64 Summary Leishmaniasis is a major public health problem. The disease manifests atypically in HIV co-infected persons. The most significant development in visceral leishmaniasis has been in the field of treatment. Although pentavalent antimony compounds still remain the mainstay for primary treatment of the cutaneous and even the visceral form of the disease, more effective and safer drugs have been developed, including various formulations of amphotericin B and recently the oral drug miltefosine. 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