Cutaneous Leishmaniasis, American
Conditions
Brief summary
Cure rate for L braziliensis bolivian CL has been 70%-80% for standard systemic and local monotherapies. It would benefit patients if cure rates could be consistently \>90%, so testing a combination of two treatments is proposed. The most attractive systemic therapy is the only oral agent, miltefosine during 28 days, and the most attractive local therapy is application of Paromomycin cream for 28 days.
Detailed description
Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is endemic in the New World from approximately the US-Mexican border through Central America and the Northern part of South America down to the level of Rio de Janeiro. L braziliensis CL is perhaps the most important of these diseases, since its natural cure rate is low and it may metastasize, and our group has been evaluating therapies for L braziliensis in Bolivia for some time. In recent studies at investigator's Bolivian site for the years 2013-2016, the cure rate for L braziliensis CL has been 70%-80% for standard systemic and local therapies. Systemic agents intramuscular pentavalent antimony cured 80% (114 of 143) and oral miltefosine cured 81% (47 of 58). Local injections with pentamidine cured 72% (43 of 60); intralesional antimony cured 70% (21 of 30). In contrast, cryotherapy was ineffective \[20% (4 of 20) cured and placebo creams cured 17% (5 of 30) in one report and 10% more recently. Investigator's have recently evaluated treatment with topical paromomycin cream. Paromomycin-in-Aquaphilic had a cure rate of 77.5% (31 of 40 patients) compared to a cure rate of only 10% (2 of 20 patients) for the Aquaphilic vehicle alone. This remarkably high cure rate, combined with essentially no adverse events (both Paromomycin-Aquaphilic and Aquaphilic vehicle had only grade 1 adverse reactions in 5-10% of patients), makes Paromomycin-Aquaphilic very attractive for Bolivian CL. It would benefit patients if cure rates could be consistently \>90%. Since all the individual therapies, whether systemic, local injections, or local cream, have an approximately 75% cure rate, we propose testing a combination of two treatment. The most attractive systemic therapy is the only oral agent, miltefosine, and the most attractive local therapy is simple application of Paromomycin cream. Thus the present protocol proposes to evaluate the efficacy of miltefosine, 2.5 mg/kg (50 mg tid) for 28 days, plus Paromomycin-Aquaphilic daily for 28 days. The controls will be the two components of this combination used separately: miltefosine alone, Paromomycin-Aquaphilic alone.
Interventions
28 days of miltefosine plus 28 days of Paromomycin cream
28 days of miltefosine
28 days of paromomycin creaam
Sponsors
Study design
Eligibility
Inclusion criteria
Inclusion and exlusion Criteria: * Gender: Male or female * Age: \>12 yrs of age * Presentation: 1-to-2 ulcerative lesions, each \< 30 mm in largest diameter and with a total lesion area \<900 mm2. * Parasitology: Parasitological confirmation of the lesion will be made by visualization or culture of Leishmania from the biopsy or aspirate of the lesion. * Previous treatment for leishmaniasis: * No specific or putatively specific therapy (Sb, pentamidine, amphotericin B, miltefosine, imidazoles, allopurinol) in the last 3 months * Other diseases: No concomitant diseases by history that would be likely in the PI's opinion to interact, either positively or negatively, with treatment.
Design outcomes
Primary
| Measure | Time frame | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Change in Size of cutaneous ulcers | 2, 3, 4 and 6 months after the begining of therapy. | Complete healing of all lesions by 6 months after the beginning of therapy. Thus for a patient to be cured: no lesion could enlarge by 50%, relapse, or heal incompletely; and no new Leishmania-positive lesion can have appeared. |
Countries
Bolivia