Immunochemotherapy for visceral leishmaniasis: a controlled pilot trial of antimony versus antimony plus interferon-gamma. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Twenty-four Kenyan patients with visceral leishmaniasis were treated for 30 days with either conventional therapy (daily pentavalent antimony, n = 14) or experimental immunochemotherapy (daily antimony plus interferon-gamma [IFN-gamma] every other day, n = 10). All 24 patients responded clinically to treatment, and microscopic splenic aspirate scores rapidly decreased in both groups. As judged by splenic aspirate culture results, IFN-gamma-treated patients responded more quickly (50% versus 22% culture-negative after one week and 75% versus 58% culture-negative after two weeks). While not statistically significant, these differences raise the possibility that combination therapy using IFN-gamma, which was safe and well-tolerated, may accelerate the early parasitologic response in patients with visceral leishmaniasis.

publication date

  • May 1, 1993

Research

keywords

  • Antimony Sodium Gluconate
  • Interferon-gamma
  • Leishmaniasis, Visceral

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 0027190733

PubMed ID

  • 8390795

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 48

issue

  • 5