Publication | Closed Access
Efficacy of Miltefosine for Bolivian Cutaneous Leishmaniasis
139
Citations
3
References
2008
Year
Parasitic DiseaseOral MiltefosineLeishmania BraziliensisAntiparasitic AgentParasitic ProtozoaPharmacologyDermatologyMedicineVisceral LeishmaniasisBolivian Cutaneous LeishmaniasisParasitologyIntramuscular Antimony
Oral miltefosine (2.5 mg/kg/d for 28 days) was compared with intramuscular antimony (20 mg/kg/d for 20 days) in the treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by Leishmania braziliensis in Palos Blancos, Bolivia. The cure rates with 6 months of follow-up were statistically similar: 36 of 41 evaluable miltefosine patients (88%) versus 15 of 16 (94%) evaluable antimony patients. However, antimony cured more rapidly, because, by 1 month after therapy, 31 of 44 miltefosine patients (70%) compared with 16 of 16 antimony patients (100%) had achieved cure. The two conclusions from this work are that oral miltefosine can be used for cutaneous disease in this part of Bolivia and that miltefosine was more effective for L. braziliensis in this region than for L. braziliensis in Guatemala. Chemotherapy needs to be evaluated in each endemic region, even if the "same" species of Leishmania causes disease in these locales.
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