Immunotherapy and immunochemotherapy in visceral leishmaniasis : promising treatments for this neglected disease.
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2014
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Resumo
Leishmaniasis has several clinical forms: self-healing or chronic cutaneous leishmaniasis
or post-kala-azar dermal leishmaniasis; mucosal leishmaniasis; visceral leishmaniasis (VL),
which is fatal if left untreated.The epidemiology and clinical features of VL vary greatly due
to the interaction of multiple factors including parasite strains, vectors, host genetics, and
the environment. Human immunodeficiency virus infection augments the severity of VL
increasing the risk of developing active disease by 100–2320 times. An effective vaccine
for humans is not yet available. Resistance to chemotherapy is a growing problem in many
regions, and the costs associated with drug identification and development, make commercial
production for leishmaniasis, unattractive.The toxicity of currently drugs, their long
treatment course, and limited efficacy are significant concerns. For cutaneous disease,
many studies have shown promising results with immunotherapy/immunochemotherapy,
aimed to modulate and activate the immune response to obtain a therapeutic cure. Nowadays,
the focus of many groups centers on treating canine VL by using vaccines and
immunomodulators with or without chemotherapy. In human disease, the use of cytokines
like interferon-g associated with pentavalent antimonials demonstrated promising results
in patients that did not respond to conventional treatment. In mice, immunomodulation
based on monoclonal antibodies to remove endogenous immunosuppressive cytokines
(interleukin-10) or block their receptors, antigen-pulsed syngeneic dendritic cells, or biological
products like Pam3Cys (TLR ligand) has already been shown as a prospective treatment
of the disease. This review addresses VL treatment, particularly immunotherapy and/or
immunochemotherapy as an alternative to conventional drug treatment in experimental
models, canine VL, and human disease.
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Immunology, Leishmania infantum, Leishmania donovani
Citação
ROATT, B. M. et al. Immunotherapy and immunochemotherapy in visceral leishmaniasis: promising treatments for this neglected disease. Frontiers In Immunology, v. 5, p.272 1- 272 12, 2014. Disponível em: <https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2014.00272/full>. Acesso em: 10 out. 2016