Cure of antimony-unresponsive Indian visceral leishmaniasis with amphotericin B lipid complex

S Sundar, HW Murray - Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1996 - academic.oup.com
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1996academic.oup.com
Twenty-one Indian patients with visceral leishmaniasis who did not respond to or relapsed
after 28–60 days of pentavalent antimony therapy were treated with amphotericin B lipid
complex (ABLC). Five infusions (3 mg/kg each) given every second day over 9 days (total
dose, 15 mglkg) resulted in a 100% apparent cure response. In 4 other patients who had not
responded to antimony, apparent cure was also induced by ABLC given at 3 mg/kg a day for
5 consecutive days (total dose, 15 mg/kg). Fever and chills developed routinely during the …
Abstract
Twenty-one Indian patients with visceral leishmaniasis who did not respond to or relapsed after 28–60 days of pentavalent antimony therapy were treated with amphotericin B lipid complex (ABLC). Five infusions (3 mg/kg each) given every second day over 9 days (total dose, 15 mglkg) resulted in a 100% apparent cure response. In 4 other patients who had not responded to antimony, apparent cure was also induced by ABLC given at 3 mg/kg a day for 5 consecutive days (total dose, 15 mg/kg). Fever and chills developed routinely during the initial 2-h infusions; these reactions were tolerated and diminished with successive infusions. Six months after treatment, all 25 patients were healthy, had parasite-free bone marrow aspirates, and were considered cured. ABLC is effective short-course therapy for kala-azar patients who do not respond to conventional antimony treatment.
Oxford University Press