View clinical trials related to Cutaneous Leishmaniasis.
Filter by:The purpose of this Treatment Investigational New Drug application was to make miltefosine available for mucocutaneous leishmaniasis patients presenting in the United States. If entrance criteria were met, subjects with mucosal or cutaneous leishmaniasis received miltefosine at a targeted dose of 2.5 mg/kg/day for 28 days. During treatment at weeks 1, 2, and 4, the patient returned to the treatment facility to be assessed for adverse events. Blood for transaminase and creatinine values were drawn at the midpoint and at the end of therapy. Patients returned to the treatment facility to be examined clinically at 6 weeks (ie, 2 weeks after the end of therapy), 3 months (2 months after therapy), and 7 months (6 months after treatment) for mucosal leishmaniasis and cutaneous leishmaniasis patients, and also at 13 months (12 months after treatment) for mucosal leishmaniasis patients.
Leishmaniasis with diverse clinical manifestations is caused by different species of Leishmania and is endemic in many countries. Although Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (CL) is a self-healing disease, but it takes a long time to heal. Pentavalent antimonials are still the first-line treatment of CL which needs multiple injections, are painful and as such not tolerated by most of the patients, in addition available treatments are not always effective and resistance is reported. Paromomycin sulfate (PM) reported to show anti-Leishmania activity against both CL and visceral leishmaniasis (VL) since 1960s. Therapeutic strategy with high efficacy is urgently needed especially for Anthroponotic Cutaneous Leishmaniasis (ACL). Liposomes are lipid bilayer molecules which entrap water-soluble molecules in their internal water compartment and water-insoluble ones into their lipid bilayers. Liposomes, in proper formulations and sizes, deliver drugs to the skin based on the similarity of the bilayers structure of lipid vesicles to that of natural membrane and target the macrophages within dermis. Several lipid-based formulations have been developed to treat experimental leishmaniasis. Recently different doses of liposomal formulation of PM and liposomal formulation of Glucantime were prepared and showed high efficacy in vivo against L. major infection in BALB/c mice. In this study the efficacy of liposomal formulation of PM or liposomal formulation of Glucantime in combination with systemic Glucantime in the treatment of ACL parasitologically proven patients will be evaluated. The clinical trial will be carried out according to the International approved GCP (Good Clinical Practice) guide lines.
The purpose of this study is to determine the efficacy, safety, and immunogenicity of an investigational vaccine being developed for the treatment of leishmaniasis, including cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL). The vaccine, identified as LEISH-F2 + MPL-SE, consists of a Leishmania protein (LEISH-F2) together with an adjuvant MPL-SE.
The present study was designed as a randomized, single blind, placebo-controlled, study to evaluate the effect of 400 µg of recombinant human GM-CSF applied intralesionally and associated with half of the total dose of antimony in a reduced time schedule (20mgSbV/Kg/d for 10 days) as compared to the full dose of antimony (20mgSbV/Kg/d for 20 days) to treat cutaneous leishmaniasis ulcers.
This study serves to compare the effectiveness of treating cutaneous leishmaniasis with either intravenous sodium stibogluconate or direct heat therapy using the ThermoMed-TM device.
The aim of the project is to determine whether daylight activated photodynamic therapy is effective in treating cutaneous leishmaniasis caused by L. major and L. tropical. PDT is classically performed as a two-step procedure in which MAL application to the lesion constitutes the first step, and PpIX activation by light of appropriate wavelength from an artificial light source constitutes the second step. Based on the knowledge that red and blue light required to activate PpIX are part of the daylight spectrum, the investigators postulated that effective PpIX activation can be obtained by exposure of the MAL treated lesions to daylight thus substantially simplifying the PDT procedure by omitting the 3 hour incubation period and the subsequent exposure to artificial light. In accord, in a recent study the investigators showed that daylight-activated PDT (DA-PDT) was as effective as conventional MAL-PDT in treating precancerous actinic keratoses lesion. Furthermore the investigators found that DA-PDT is significantly less painful than conventional MAL-PDT. The investigators now propose to study the efficacy of DA-PDT in the treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis. DA-PDT has obvious advantages to conventional leishmania treatment forms: As opposed to most of the available treatment options, DA-PDT is a self-administered procedure that does not require the assistance of medical personnel. Secondly, judged by our experience with MAL-PDT, only few treatment sessions are required for effective parasite killing as opposed to the prolonged procedures usually required for treatment of leishmaniasis. Third, PDT has the far the best safety profile of all available treatment options.
The objective of the project is to study the pathogenesis of Leishmania tropica infection in a focus of infection, to learn about relationship of infection in humans with ecological factors such as infection in hyraxes reservoir hosts and vector sandflies
The objective of this study is to determine the effectiveness and toxicity of WR 279,396, a topical cream for the treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis. This study is to be conducted with a placebo control under double-blind conditions in a local population group in Tunisia where leishmaniasis is endemic.
The adequate treatment of the American tegumentary leishmaniasis is crucial since the disease, differently from the caused by the Old World species, is painful and not self-healing and may lead to the disfiguring mucosal involvement. So far, pentavalent antimony compounds have been considered the treatment of choice for cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL), however, these drugs present high frequency of side effects and important disadvantages as parenteral administration and need for careful renal and cardiac monitoring. Azithromycin is a macrolide antibiotic, non-expensive, largely commercially available that has shown in-vitro and in vivo activity against different species of Leishmania. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of oral azithromycin for the treatment of CL. The efficacy of oral treatment of azithromycin 500 mg/day for 20 days is going to be compared with the standard treatment of intramuscular injections of 20 mg/Kg/day of pentavalent antimonials (Glucantime®) for 20 days in patients with CL from two endemic regions of Brazil: the metropolitan region of Belo Horizonte and Montes Claros (MG)in the southeast Brazil and in Corte de Pedras (Bahia), Northeastern Brazil. The patients follow up lasts for 12 months.
The primary objective of this protocol is to treat laboratory confirmed cutaneous leishmaniasis with WR 279,396 in military health care beneficiaries. In this study "cutaneous leishmaniasis" is defined as Old World Leishmaniasis if acquired in the Southwest Central Asia/Middle East.