Efficacy of a Short Course (10 Days) of High-Dose Meglumine Antimonate With or Without Interferon- in Treating Cutaneous Leishmaniasis in Guatemala
- 1 March 1994
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 18 (3) , 381-384
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinids/18.3.381
Abstract
Sixty-six Guatemalan men with parasitologically confirmed cutaneous leishmaniasis, due most commonly to Leishmania braziliensis, were randomly assigned to receive one of three treatment regimens: meglumine antimonate (meglumine) for 20 days; meglumine for 10 days; and meglumine for 10 days plus alternate-day injections of interferon-γ. In each group, meglumine was given intravenously as 20 mg of antimony/(kg of body weight · d). All treatment regimens were associated with similar response rates: the lesions of 19 (90%) of 21 patients who received meglumine for 20 days, 18 (90%) of 20 patients who received meglumine for 10 days, and all 22 patients who received meglumine plus interferon-γ were completely reepithelialized by 13 weeks. In addition, for patients receiving all treatment regimens, test-of-cure cultures for Leishmania were negative and reactivation of lesions did not occur during 12 months of follow-up. The high efficacy of our 10-day course of meglumine indicates that the currently recommended duration of 20 days may be unnecessary for infections caused by L. braziliensis and suggests that a 10-day course of high-dose antimony should be tested as therapy for cutaneous leishmaniasis in other geographic areas.Keywords
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