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Administration of Recombinant Interleukin-2 Reduces the Local Parasite Load of Patients with Disseminated Cutaneous Leishmaniasis

37

Citations

20

References

1990

Year

Abstract

Three patients with disseminated cutaneous leishmaniasis received three intranodular injections of 10 micrograms of recombinant interleukin 2 (rIL-2) at 48-h intervals. After 7 and 14 days, 4-mm punch biopsies were taken of control and injected nodules and processed for histology, electron microscopy, immunocytochemistry, and parasite culture. Control sites exhibited loose infiltrates of parasitized macrophages and T cells predominantly of the CD8+ phenotype. Amastigotes were present in large numbers and were found distributed within tightly apposed endosomes and larger vacuoles. After the administration of rIL-2, there was a prominent influx of T cells, predominantly of the CD4+ phenotype, and an increased number of plasma cells. At 7 days, leishmanial amastigotes were present in either the same or somewhat reduced numbers but predominantly within large, lucent vacuoles. By 14 days the number of amastigotes was strikingly lower. Lymphokine-treated skin sites became sterile in two patients, as evaluated by parasite culture after rIL-2 injection. The results suggest that the local administration of rIL-2 induces a beneficial enhancement of the cellular immunity with a consequent disposal of parasites in the cutaneous site.

References

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