Immunochemotherapy for a Systemic Intracellular Infection: Accelerated Response Using Interferon- in Visceral Leishmaniasis

Abstract
To determine if cytokine immunotherapy accelerates the response to conventional treatment in visceral leishmaniasis (kala-azar), previously untreated Indian patients were given antimony for 30 days (n = 15) or antimony plus interferon-v (IFN-γ; n = 16). After 10 days, 10 (63%) of 16 patients treated with antimony plus IFN-γ versus 1 (7%) of 15 randomized to antimony alone were considered cured of parasites (P < .005). On day 20, 14 (93%) of 15 versus 6 (40%) of 15 patients, respectively, were apparent clinical cures (P < .006), and treatment was discontinued early in the 14 IFN-γ-treated responders. Day 30 apparent cure rates (100% vs. 73%) and 6-month ultimate cure responses (87% vs. 60%) were higher in IFN-γ-treated patients but not statistically different from controls (P> .05). All 13 IFN-γ-treated subjects who were cured (12 of whom received therapy for 20 days) have remained healthy with follow-up of 14-24 months (mean, 18.9). These results indicate that IFN-γ successfully accelerates the parasitologic and clinical response to antimony treatment, an effect that should permit shortening the duration of conventional therapy in previously untreated kala-azar.