Publication | Open Access
Current and promising novel drug candidates against visceral leishmaniasis
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Citations
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References
2019
Year
Medicinal ChemistryPuerto RicoMedicineSan JuanAntiparasitic AgentImmunologyParasitic ProtozoaAfrican TrypanosomiasisPharmacotherapyImmunotherapeuticsAbstract LeishmaniasisDrug DevelopmentPharmacologyVisceral LeishmaniasisParasitologyDrug DiscoveryDrug Resistance
Abstract Leishmaniasis is a group of zoonotic diseases caused by a trypanosomatid parasite mostly in impoverished populations of low-income countries. In their different forms, leishmaniasis is prevalent in more than 98 countries all over the world and approximately 360-million people are at risk. Since no vaccine is currently available to prevent any form of the disease, the control strategy of leishmaniasis mainly relies on early case detection followed by adequate pharmacological treatment that may improve the prognosis and can reduce transmission. A handful of compounds and formulations are available for the treatment of leishmaniasis in humans, but only few of them are currently in use since most of these agents are associated with toxicity problems such as nephrotoxicity and cardiotoxicity in addition to resistance problems. In recent decades, very few novel drugs, new formulations of standard drugs or combinations of them have been approved against leishmaniasis. This review highlights the current drugs and combinations that are used medical practice and recent advances in new treatments against leishmaniasis that were pointed out in the recent 2 nd Conference, Global Challenges in Neglected Tropical Diseases, held in San Juan, Puerto Rico in June 2018, emphasizing the plethora of new families of molecules that are bridging the gap between preclinical and first-in-man trials in next future.
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