Abstract

An oral treatment for visceral and cutaneous leishmaniasis has been searched for over the last decades. An oral drug would facilitate treatment and lower costs. Oral miltefosine (Zentaris/ASTA Medica AG, Germany), an alkylphosphocholine, is under clinical development for treatment of leishmaniasis. Phase I, II and III clinical trials have been performed in visceral leishmaniasis in India; the overall response rate with 100 mg/day over 4 weeks is 96%. A first clinical trial in New World cutaneous leishmaniasis has shown a final cure rate of 94% at a dose of 150 mg/day over 3 or 4 weeks. Side effects are mainly gastrointestinal (vomiting, diarrhoea). Furthermore, transient elevation of transaminases or urea/creatinine has been observed. The clinical results suggest that miltefosine is the first oral therapy that is effective and safe in visceral and cutaneous leishmaniasis.

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