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      Relapse after Treatment with Miltefosine for Visceral Leishmaniasis Is Associated with Increased Infectivity of the Infecting Leishmania donovani Strain

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          ABSTRACT

          Leishmania donovani is an intracellular protozoan parasite that causes leishmaniasis, which can range from a self-healing cutaneous disease to a fatal visceral disease depending on the infecting species. Miltefosine is currently the latest and only oral antileishmanial that came out of drug discovery pipelines in the past few decades, but recent reports indicate a significant decline in its efficacy against visceral leishmaniasis (also known as kala-azar) in the Indian subcontinent. This relapse rate of up to 20% within 12 months after treatment was shown not to be related to reinfection, drug quality, drug exposure, or drug-resistant parasites. We therefore aimed to assess other phenotypes of the parasite that may affect treatment outcome and found a significant association between the number of metacyclic parasites, parasite infectivity, and patient treatment outcome in the Indian subcontinent. Together with previous studies on resistance of L. donovani against pentavalent antimonials, these data suggest that the infectivity of the parasite, or related phenotypes, might be a more determinant factor for treatment failure in visceral leishmaniasis than drug susceptibility, warranting a reassessment of our current view on treatment failure and drug resistance in leishmaniasis and beyond.

          IMPORTANCE

          The high miltefosine relapse rate poses a major challenge for the current Kala-Azar Elimination Program in the Indian subcontinent and other leishmaniasis control programs worldwide. This relapse rate could not be related to reinfection, drug-resistant parasites, or reduced treatment quality. Here we report that an increased infectivity of the parasite is associated with miltefosine relapse of visceral leishmaniasis (VL) patients. These results supplement those obtained with antimonial-resistant L. donovani where an increased infectivity was also observed. This challenges the current view of Leishmania drug susceptibility being the biggest parasitic factor that contributes to treatment failure in leishmaniasis. These selected more infectious parasites may pose an additional burden to leishmaniasis control programs, highlighting the importance of multifaceted control measures to achieve leishmaniasis elimination in the Indian subcontinent and other regions where leishmaniasis is endemic.

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          Increasing failure of miltefosine in the treatment of Kala-azar in Nepal and the potential role of parasite drug resistance, reinfection, or noncompliance.

          Miltefosine (MIL), the only oral drug for visceral leishmaniasis (VL), is currently the first-line therapy in the VL elimination program of the Indian subcontinent. Given the paucity of anti-VL drugs and the looming threat of resistance, there is an obvious need for close monitoring of clinical efficacy of MIL. In a cohort study of 120 VL patients treated with MIL in Nepal, we monitored the clinical outcomes up to 12 months after completion of therapy and explored the potential role of drug compliance, parasite drug resistance, and reinfection. The initial cure rate was 95.8% (95% confidence interval [CI], 92.2-99.4) and the relapse rate at 6 and 12 months was 10.8% (95% CI, 5.2-16.4) and 20.0% (95% CI, 12.8-27.2) , respectively. No significant clinical risk factors of relapse apart from age <12 years were found. Parasite fingerprints of pretreatment and relapse bone marrow isolates within 8 patients were similar, suggesting that clinical relapses were not due to reinfection with a new strain. The mean promastigote MIL susceptibility (50% inhibitory concentration) of isolates from definite cures was similar to that of relapses. Although more tolerant strains were observed, parasite resistance, as currently measured, is thus not likely involved in MIL treatment failure. Moreover, MIL blood levels at the end of treatment were similar in cured and relapsed patients. Relapse in one-fifth of the MIL-treated patients observed in our study is an alarming signal for the VL elimination campaign, urging for further review and cohort monitoring.
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            Efficacy of miltefosine in the treatment of visceral leishmaniasis in India after a decade of use.

            Miltefosine is the only oral drug available for treatment of Indian visceral leishmaniasis (VL), which was shown to have an efficacy of 94% in a phase III trial in the Indian subcontinent. Its unrestricted use has raised concern about its continued effectiveness. This study evaluates the efficacy and safety of miltefosine for the treatment of VL after a decade of use in India. An open-label, noncomparative study was performed in which 567 patients received oral miltefosine (50 mg for patients weighing <25 kg, 100 mg in divided doses for those weighing ≥25 kg, and 2.5 mg per kg for those aged <12 years, daily for 28 days) in a directly observed manner. Patients were followed up for 6 months to see the response to therapy. At the end of treatment the initial cure rate was 97.5% (intention to treat), and 6 months after the end of treatment the final cure rate was 90.3%. The overall death rate was 0.9% (5 of 567), and 2 deaths were related to drug toxicity. Gastrointestinal intolerance was frequent (64.5%). The drug was interrupted in 9 patients (1.5%) because of drug-associated adverse events. As compared to the phase III trial that led to registration of the drug a decade ago, there is a substantial increase in the failure rate of oral miltefosine for treatment of VL in India.
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              Metacyclogenesis is a major determinant of Leishmania promastigote virulence and attenuation.

              The in vivo virulence patterns of promastigote populations defined on the basis of agglutination by the lectin peanut agglutinin (PNA) were studied for various cloned lines of Leishmania major. Promastigotes derived from logarithmic-phase cultures, which were routinely 100% agglutinated at 100 micrograms of PNA per ml, were relatively avirulent for BALB/c mice. The relative virulence of stationary-phase promastigotes appeared to be attributable to the proportion of nonagglutinable (PNA-) promastigotes contained within these populations. Purification of PNA- organisms from stationary cultures provided for each clone the most virulent inoculum, supporting the view that this change in lectin binding accurately reflects the development of infective metacyclic stage promastigotes. By studying this marker, we found that there was considerable variation in the degree to which different strains and clones underwent metacyclogenesis during growth. Examination of a reportedly avirulent L. major clone revealed that metacyclogenesis was unusually delayed and inefficient for this clone, but that those PNA- promastigotes which could be recovered from late-stationary-phase cultures were virulent for BALB/c mice. The loss of virulence associated with frequent subculture could also be attributed to a drastic diminution in metacyclogenesis potential over time. A clone which yielded over 90% PNA- promastigotes during growth within passage 1 generated fewer than 10% PNA- promastigotes during growth by passage 94. Subcloning of late-passage attenuated promastigotes yielded a clone for which no PNA- promastigotes could be generated during growth, and an infective population could not be derived from this clone. Thus, metacyclogenesis does not appear to be stable for even cloned lines of Leishmania promastigotes, and virulence comparisons between different strains and clones can be meaningfully made only if the metacyclic populations contained within the respective inocula are determined.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                mBio
                MBio
                mbio
                mbio
                mBio
                mBio
                American Society of Microbiology (1752 N St., N.W., Washington, DC )
                2150-7511
                8 October 2013
                Sep-Oct 2013
                : 4
                : 5
                : e00611-13
                Affiliations
                Molecular Parasitology Unit, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium [ a ]
                Department of Microbiology, B. P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Dharan, Nepal [ b ]
                Epidemiology and Disease Control Unit, Department of Public Health, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium [ c ]
                Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium [ d ]
                Department of Internal Medicine, B. P. Koirala Institute of Health Sciences, Dharan, Nepal [ e ]
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to Jean-Claude Dujardin, jcdujardin@ 123456itg.be .

                Editor Louis Weiss, Albert Einstein College of Medicine

                Article
                mBio00611-13
                10.1128/mBio.00611-13
                3791894
                4613ee59-32ef-45dd-833a-17a75c1b2d0a
                Copyright © 2013 Rai et al.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license, which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

                History
                : 1 August 2013
                : 18 September 2013
                Page count
                Pages: 4
                Categories
                Observation
                Custom metadata
                September/October 2013

                Life sciences
                Life sciences

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