New treatment approach in Indian visceral leishmaniasis: single-dose liposomal amphotericin B followed by short-course oral miltefosine

S Sundar, M Rai, J Chakravarty… - Clinical Infectious …, 2008 - academic.oup.com
S Sundar, M Rai, J Chakravarty, D Agarwal, N Agrawal, M Vaillant, P Olliaro, HW Murray
Clinical Infectious Diseases, 2008academic.oup.com
Abstract Background. In Bihar, India, home to nearly one-half of the world's burden of
visceral leishmaniasis, drug resistance has ended the usefulness of pentavalent antimony,
which is the traditional first-line treatment. Although monotherapy with other agents is
available, the use of 2 drugs with different modes of action might increase efficacy, shorten
treatment duration, enhance compliance, and/or reduce the risk of parasite resistance. To
test the feasibility of a new approach to combination therapy in visceral leishmaniasis (also …
Abstract
Background . In Bihar, India, home to nearly one-half of the world's burden of visceral leishmaniasis, drug resistance has ended the usefulness of pentavalent antimony, which is the traditional first-line treatment. Although monotherapy with other agents is available, the use of 2 drugs with different modes of action might increase efficacy, shorten treatment duration, enhance compliance, and/or reduce the risk of parasite resistance. To test the feasibility of a new approach to combination therapy in visceral leishmaniasis (also known a kala-azar), we treated Indian patients with a single infusion of liposomal amphotericin B (L-AmB), followed 1 day later by short-course oral miltefosine.
Methods . We used a randomized, noncomparative, group-sequential, triangular design and assigned 181 subjects to treatment with 5 mg/kg of L-AmB alone (group A; 45 subjects), 5 mg/kg of L-AmB followed by miltefosine for 10 days (group B; 46 subjects) or 14 days (group C; 45 subjects), or 3.75 mg/kg of L-AmB followed by miltefosine for 14 days (group D; 45 subjects). When it became apparent that all regimens were effective, 45 additional, nonrandomized patients were assigned to receive 5 mg/kg of L-AmB followed by miltefosine for 7 days (group E).
Results . Each regimen was satisfactorily tolerated, and all 226 subjects showed initial apparent cure responses. Nine months after treatment, final cure rates were similar: group A, 91% (95% confidence interval [CI], 78%–97%]; group B, 98% (95% CI, 87%–100%); group C, 96% (95% CI, 84%–99%]; group D, 96% (95% CI, 84%–99%); and group E, 98% (95% CI, 87%–100%).
Conclusions . These results suggest that treatment with single-dose L-AmB followed by 7–14 days of miltefosine is active against Indian kala-azar. This short-course, sequential regimen warrants additional testing in India and in those regions of endemicity where visceral leishmaniasis may be more difficult to treat.
Trial registration . ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00370825.
Oxford University Press