Successful Treatment Of Refractory Visceral Leishmaniasis In India Using Antimony Plus Interferon-ã

S Sundar, F Rosenkaimer… - Journal of Infectious …, 1994 - academic.oup.com
S Sundar, F Rosenkaimer, HW Murray
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1994academic.oup.com
Fifteen Indian patients with relapsing or drug-refractory visceral leishmaniasis were
retreated for 30 days with antimony plus interferon-v (IFN-ã). All 15 had failure of an initial
course of antimony and at least one additional course of antimony or pentamidine; 7 patients
had failure of three or four prior courses of therapy. During the study, treatment was
discontinued in 2 patients because of anemia and congestive heart failure in 1 and
intractable vomiting in the other; both subsequently died. In the remaining 13 patients, IFN-ã …
Abstract
Fifteen Indian patients with relapsing or drug-refractory visceral leishmaniasis were retreated for 30 days with antimony plus interferon-v (IFN- ã). All 15 had failure of an initial course of antimony and at least one additional course of antimony or pentamidine; 7 patients had failure of three or four prior courses of therapy. During the study, treatment was discontinued in 2 patients because of anemia and congestive heart failure in 1 and intractable vomiting in the other; both subsequently died. In the remaining 13 patients, IFN-ã plus antimony treatment was associated with daily fever but no other adverse reactions. After 30 days of therapy, 9 (69%) of the 13 patients were apparently cured. Six months after treatment, all 9 were healthy, had parasite-free bone marrow aspirate smears, and were considered cured. None have relapsed during a mean follow-up of 15.9 ± 1.7 months. These results support the use of antimony plus IFN-ã as an immunochemotherapeutic alternative for kala-azar patients who have repeated failures of conventional treatment.
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