Acute visceral leishmaniasis is associated with an antigen-specific immunosuppression of mononuclear cells as evidenced by defective in vitro production of interferon gamma. We evaluated treatment with recombinant human interferon gamma in combination with conventional pentavalent antimony therapy in patients with visceral leishmaniasis. Six of eight patients with visceral leishmaniasis (mean duration, 17 months) that had been unresponsive to multiple courses of pentavalent antimony responded to treatment with recombinant human interferon gamma (100 to 400 micrograms per square meter of body-surface area per day) in addition to pentavalent antimony (20 mg per kilogram of body weight per day) for 10 to 40 days. The other two patients improved initially but then relapsed and required treatment with amphotericin B. Eight of nine additional patients with previously untreated severe visceral leishmaniasis were also successfully treated with the combination of interferon gamma and pentavalent antimony. The 14 patients who responded to this regimen had marked improvement in symptoms and in measures of anemia and leukopenia, as well as weight gain, a decrease in spleen size, and an absence or reduction of leishmanias in splenic aspirates. These patients had no recurrence of illness after a mean (+/- SE) follow-up of 8 +/- 1 months. Fever was the only major side effect of interferon gamma. We conclude that the combination of interferon gamma and pentavalent antimony is effective in treating seriously ill patients with refractory or previously untreated visceral leishmaniasis.
High tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) levels were present in the serum of 24 of 28 active visceral leishmaniasis (VL) patients (142.9 +/- 113.9 pg/ml, mean +/- SD), whereas levels were not elevated in 26 of 30 patients with cryptic leishmanial infection (16 asymptomatic, 4 with self-healing subclinical infection, and 10 posttreatment VL cases). Serum TNF alpha levels were also not elevated in 15 normal volunteers (11.3 +/- 15.6 pg/ml) and in 10 patients with tegumentary leishmaniasis (19.1 +/- 10.8 pg/ml). Leishmanial infection of human monocyte-derived macrophages enhanced the basal TNF alpha production by these cells, and this effect was further potentiated by treatment with recombinant interferon-gamma. After effective treatment of VL patients, serum TNF alpha levels dropped rapidly (129 +/- 112 vs. 9 +/- 13 pg/ml in 10 days), even before clinical parameters such as spleen size or parasitism, white blood cell count, or levels of hemoglobin returned to normal values. On the other hand, patients unresponsive to treatment remained with elevated levels (276 +/- 69 vs. 155 +/- 71 pg/ml in 10 days). Thus, serum TNF alpha levels in VL patients are a good parameter to monitor in determining host response to therapy.
Twenty-four patients with acute visceral leishmaniasis and leukopenia (< 1500 neutrophils/mm3) due to Leishmania chagasi were studied, 4 in an open-label pilot study and 20 in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Patients received granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF), 5 micrograms/kg daily, or placebo for 10 days, plus 10-20 mg/kg pentavalent antimony daily for 20 days. In GM-CSF recipients, neutrophil counts increased threefold and fourfold over baseline at 5 and 10 days, respectively, and were significantly higher than those in placebo recipients (P < .02). Eosinophil and monocyte counts were significantly increase in GM-CSF recipients at 10 days (P < or = .03). Secondary infections occurred in 3 GM-CSF and in 8 placebo recipients (P = .04). All patients had complete resolution of their leishmaniasis at 3 months. Few adverse events were recorded. GM-CSF, 5 micrograms/kg daily for 10 days, was safe, rapidly reversed neutropenia, and reduced the number of secondary infections in patients with leishmaniasis.
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