PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases (Nov 2017)

Liposomal amphotericin B in travelers with cutaneous and muco-cutaneous leishmaniasis: Not a panacea.

  • Romain Guery,
  • Benoit Henry,
  • Guillaume Martin-Blondel,
  • Claire Rouzaud,
  • Florence Cordoliani,
  • Gundel Harms,
  • Jean-Pierre Gangneux,
  • Françoise Foulet,
  • Emmanuelle Bourrat,
  • Michel Baccard,
  • Gloria Morizot,
  • Paul-Henri Consigny,
  • Antoine Berry,
  • Johannes Blum,
  • Olivier Lortholary,
  • Pierre Buffet,
  • French Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Study group & the LeishMan network

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pntd.0006094
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11
p. e0006094

Abstract

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Complex cutaneous and muco-cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL and MCL) often requires systemic therapy. Liposomal amphotericin B (L-AmB) has a strong potential for a solid clinical benefit in this indication.We conducted a retrospective analysis of data from a French centralized referral treatment program and from the "LeishMan" European consortium database. All patients with parasitologically proven CL or MCL who received at least one dose of L-AmB were included. Positive outcome was based on ulcer closure as per recent WHO workshop guidelines.From 2008 through 2016, 43 travelers returning from 18 countries (Old World n = 28; New World n = 15) were analyzed with a median follow-up duration of 79 days [range 28-803]. Main clinical forms were: localized CL with one or multiple lesions (n = 32; 74%) and MCL (n = 8; 19%). As per published criteria 19 of 41 patients (46%) were cured 90 days after one course of L-AmB. When the following items -improvement before day 90 but no subsequent follow-up, delayed healing (>3 months) and healing after a second course of L-AmB- were included in the definition of cure, 27 of 43 patients (63%) had a positive outcome. Five patients (MCL = 1; CL = 4) experienced a relapse after a median duration of 6 months [range 3-27] post treatment and 53% of patients (23/43) experienced at least one adverse event including severe hypokalaemia and acute cardiac failure (one patient each). In multivariate analysis, tegumentary infection with L. infantum was associated with complete healing after L-AmB therapy (OR 5.8 IC 95% [1.03-32]) while infection with other species had no impact on outcome.In conditions close to current medical practice, the therapeutic window of L-AmB was narrow in travellers with CL or MCL, with the possible exception of those infected with L. infantum. Strict follow-up is warranted when using L-AmB in patients with mild disease.