Abstract

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) coinfection with Leishmania infantum or Leishmania donovani, the agents of visceral leishmaniasis (or kala-azar), has become a fatal public health problem in the tropics where kala-azar is endemic. The clinical presentation of patients with HIV and L. infantum coinfection is described using two unique databases that together produce the largest case series of patients with kala-azar infected with HIV in South America. First, a retrospective study paired the list of all patients with kala-azar from 1994 to 2004 with another of all patients with HIV/AIDS from the reference hospital for both diseases in the City of Teresina, State of Piauí, Brazil. Beginning in 2005 through to 2010 this information was prospectively collected at the moment of hospitalization. During the study, 256 admissions related to 224 patients with HIV/L. infantum coinfection were registered and most of them were males between 20-40 years of age. Most of the 224 patients were males between 20-40 years of age. HIV contraction was principally sexual. The most common symptoms and signs were pallor, fever, asthenia and hepatosplenomegaly. 16.8% of the cohort died. The primary risk factors associated to death were kidney or respiratory failure, somnolence, hemorrhagic manifestations and a syndrome of systemic inflammation. The diagnosis of HIV and kala-azar was made simultaneously in 124 patients. The urban association between HIV and kala-azar coinfection in South America is worrisome due to difficulty in establishing the diagnosis and higher mortality among the coinfected then those with either disease independently. HIV/L. infantum coinfection exhibits some singular characteristics and due to its higher mortality it requires immediate assistance to patients and greater research on appropriate combination therapy.

Highlights

  • Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) coinfection with Leishmania infantum or Leishmania donovani, the agents of visceral leishmaniasis, has become a fatal public health problem in the tropics where kala-azar is endemic

  • From 2005 to 2010 data was prospectively collected at hospital admission; patients admitted with kala-azar were tested for HIV

  • The coinfection of HIV with viscerotropic Leishmania has been described in several areas of the world[5,8,9,12,13]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

About 350 million people are at risk of contracting leishmaniasis, one of the most neglected tropical diseases. 21 states in Brazil annually report approximately 3,500 new cases of the disease[1]. The pandemic of HIV/AIDS began in 1980, coinciding with the start of the urbanization of kala-azar in Brazil[7]. The urbanization of kalaazar in Brazil started in Teresina, northeast Brazil in 1981 and since 1994 the occurrence in HIV-infected patients has been registered. Teresina has the most documented cases of the association of kala-azar and HIV in Brazil[10]. This manuscript aims to describe the coinfection HIV/L. infantum in order to highlight the importance of the problem and to discuss the clinical characteristics and the identification of new patients with the combination of the infections

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