Abstract

Although treatment of visceral leishmaniasis with pentavalent antimony is usually successful, some patients require second-line drug therapy, most commonly with amphotericin B. To identify the clinical characteristics that predict an inadequate response to pentavalent antimony, a case-control study was undertaken in Teresina, Piaui, Brazil. Over a two-year period, there were 19 cases of VL in which the staff physicians of a hospital prescribed second-line therapy with amphotericin B after determining that treatment with pentavalent antimony had failed. The control group consisted of 97 patients that were successfully treated with pentavalent antimony. A chart review using univariate and multivariate analysis was performed. The cure rate was 90% with amphotericin B. The odds ratio for the prescription of amphotericin B was 10.2 for children less than one year old, compared with individuals aged over 10 years. Patients who presented coinfection had an OR of 7.1 while those on antibiotics had an OR of 2.8. These data support either undertaking a longer course of therapy with pentavalent antimony for children or using amphotericin B as a first-line agent for children and individuals with coinfections. It also suggests that chemoprophylaxis directed toward bacterial coinfection in small children with VL may be indicated.

Highlights

  • Treatment of visceral leishmaniasis with pentavalent antimony is usually successful, some patients require second-line drug therapy, most commonly with amphotericin B

  • Despite an exhaustive search in two different sources, we were not able to obtain reliable data about the number of doses of pentavalent antimony used by each patient; frequently the number of registered doses was less than the minimum recommended, or each source had different information about a patient’s use of the drug

  • There was one death (5.3%) among the 19 non-responders who were treated at the hospital (OR = 1.8, p

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Summary

Introduction

Treatment of visceral leishmaniasis with pentavalent antimony is usually successful, some patients require second-line drug therapy, most commonly with amphotericin B. In an epidemic in the city of Teresina, nearly one thousand people were treated with pentavalent antimony during a two-year period, and a small percentage of these patients subsequently received therapy with amphotericin B.

Results
Conclusion

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