Objectives: The aim of this study was to report the patient profile and treatment outcomes, including relapses, of patients with visceral leishmaniasis (VL) treated with liposomal amphotericin B (AmBisome) in Gedaref, Sudan.
Methods: AmBisome was offered to two groups of patients: primary VL patients with specific criteria (age ≤2 or ≥45 years, advanced clinical disease, pregnancy, HIV co-infection and contraindications for antimonials) and VL relapses. AmBisome was given at a total dose of 30 mg/kg, over 10 days. Slow responders received up to 50 mg/kg. Treatment failure was confirmed parasitologically. Standardised treatment outcomes were assessed.
Results: Between March 2010 and June 2012, a total of 281 (74%) patients with primary VL and 98 (26%) patients with VL relapses received AmBisome (54% male, median age = 11 years, interquartile range 2-30). End-of-treatment outcomes for primary VL were 260 (92%) initial cure including three (1%) slow responders, three (1%) treatment failures, 14 (5%) deaths and four (1%) unknown outcomes. Outcomes for VL relapses were 92 (94%) initial cure with five (5%) slow responders, four (4%) treatment failures, one (1%) death and one (1%) unknown outcome. At 6 months, there were 19 (7%) relapses amongst primary VL and 10 (10%) VL relapses had a new relapse. Loss to follow-up in both groups was 38%. None of the deaths that occurred during the study period was attributed to AmBisome.
Conclusion: AmBisome appears to be effective for initial cure of VL and the drug seems safe, but is expensive (400 USD/treatment). Sustained mechanisms to allow improved access of this expensive drug particularly in East Africa are urgently needed. Relapses and losses to follow-up require specific investigation.
Keywords: Sudan; amphotericin B; kala-azar; operational research; treatment.
© 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.