Citation:Silva, H., Liyanage, A., Deerasinghe, T., Chandrasekara, V., Chellappan, K., & Karunaweera, N. D. (2021, October 22). Treatment failure to sodium stibogluconate in cutaneous leishmaniasis: A challenge to infection control and disease elimination. PLOS ONE, 16(10), e0259009. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0259009
Date:2021
Abstract:
The first-line treatment for Leishmania donovani-induced cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) in
Sri Lanka is intra-lesional sodium stibogluconate (IL-SSG). Antimony failures in leishmaniasis
is a challenge both at regional and global level, threatening the ongoing disease control
efforts. There is a dearth of information on treatment failures to routine therapy in Sri Lanka,
which hinders policy changes in therapeutics. Laboratory-confirmed CL patients (n = 201)
who attended the District General Hospital Hambantota and Base Hospital Tangalle in
southern Sri Lanka between 2016 and 2018 were included in a descriptive cohort study and
followed up for three months to assess the treatment response of their lesions to IL-SSG.
Treatment failure (TF) of total study population was 75.1% and the majority of them were
>20 years (127/151,84%). Highest TF was seen in lesions on the trunk (16/18, 89%) while
those on head and neck showed the least (31/44, 70%). Nodules were least responsive to
therapy (27/31, 87.1%) unlike papules (28/44, 63.6%). Susceptibility to antimony therapy
seemed age-dependant with treatment failure associated with factors such as time elapsed
since onset to seeking treatment, number and site of the lesions. This is the first detailed
study on characteristics of CL treatment failures in Sri Lanka. The findings highlight the
need for in depth investigations on pathogenesis of TF and importance of reviewing existing
treatment protocols to introduce more effective strategies. Such interventions would enable
containment of the rapid spread of L.donovani infections in Sri Lanka that threatens the
ongoing regional elimination drive.