Case Reports

Cutaneous Leishmaniasis Successfully Treated With Miltefosine

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Presentation and Prognosis
For patients who develop leishmaniasis, the disease course and prognosis depend greatly on the species and manifestation. The most common form of leishmaniasis is localized cutaneous leishmaniasis, which has an annual incidence of up to 1 million cases. It initially presents as macules, usually at the site of inoculation within several months to years of infection.6 The macules expand into papules and plaques that reach maximum size over at least 1 week4 and then progress into crusted ulcers up to 5 cm in diameter with raised edges. Although usually painless and self-limited, these lesions can take years to spontaneously heal, with the risk for atrophic scarring and altered pigmentation. Lymphatic involvement manifests as lymphadenitis or regional lymphadenopathy and is common with lesions caused by the subgenus Viannia.6

Leishmania braziliensis and L panamensis, the species that infected our patients, can uniquely cause cutaneous leishmaniasis that metastasizes into mucocutaneous leishmaniasis, which always affects the nasal mucosa. Risk factors for transformation include a primary lesion site above the waist, multiple or large primary lesions, and delayed healing of primary cutaneous leishmaniasis. Mucocutaneous leishmaniasis can result in notable morbidity and even mortality from invasion and destruction of nasal and oropharyngeal mucosa, as well as intercurrent pneumonia, especially if treatment is insufficient or delayed.4

Diagnosis
Prompt treatment relies on accurate and timely diagnosis, which is complicated by the relative unfamiliarity with leishmaniasis in the United States. The differential diagnosis for cutaneous leishmaniasis is broad, including deep fungal infection, Mycobacterium infection, cutaneous granulomatous conditions, nonmelanoma cutaneous neoplasms, and trauma. Taking a thorough patient history, including potential exposures and travels; having high clinical suspicion; and being aware of classic presentation allows for identification of leishmaniasis and subsequent stratification by manifestation.7

Diagnosis is made by detecting Leishmania organisms or DNA using light microscopy and staining to visualize the kinetoplast in an amastigote, molecular methods, or specialized culturing.7 The CDC is a valuable diagnostic partner for confirmation and speciation. Specific instructions for specimen collection and transportation can be found by contacting the CDC or reading their guide.8 To provide prompt care and reassurance to patients, it is important to be aware of the coordination effort that may be needed to send samples, receive results, and otherwise correspond with a separate institution.

Treatment
Treatment of cutaneous leishmaniasis is indicated to decrease the risk for mucosal dissemination and clinical reactivation of lesions, accelerate healing of lesions, decrease local morbidity caused by large or persistent lesions, and decrease the reservoir of infection in places where infected humans serve as reservoir hosts. Oral treatments include ketoconazole, itraconazole, and fluconazole, recommended at doses ranging from 200 to 600 mg daily for at least 28 days. For severe, refractory, or visceral leishmaniasis, parenteral choices include pentavalent antimonials, amphotericin B deoxycholate, and pentamidine isethionate, each with known toxicity or limited data on efficacy.6 Pentavalent antimonials can cause life-threatening cardiotoxicity and are more difficult to administer.9 Furthermore, they are not approved by the US Food and Drug Administration or commercially available in the United States, with only sodium stibogluconate available through the CDC.6

Miltefosine is becoming a more common treatment of leishmaniasis because of its oral route, tolerability in nonpregnant patients, and commercial availability. It was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration in 2014 for cutaneous leishmaniasis due to L braziliensis, L panamensis, and Leishmania guyanensis; mucosal leishmaniasis due to L braziliensis; and visceral leishmaniasis due to Leishmania donovani in patients at least 12 years of age. For cutaneous leishmaniasis, the standard dosage of 50 mg twice daily (for patients weighing 30–44 kg) or 3 times daily (for patients weighing 45 kg or more) for 28 consecutive days has cure rates of 48% to 85% by 6 months after therapy ends. Cure is defined as epithelialization of lesions, no enlargement greater than 50% in lesions, no appearance of new lesions, and/or negative parasitology. The antileishmanial mechanism of action is unknown and likely involves interaction with lipids, inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase, and apoptosislike cell death. Miltefosine is contraindicated in pregnancy. The most common adverse reactions in patients include nausea (35.9%–41.7%), motion sickness (29.2%), headache (28.1%), and emesis (4.5%–27.5%). With the exception of headache, these adverse reactions can decrease with administration of food, fluids, and antiemetics. Potentially more serious but rarer adverse reactions include elevated serum creatinine (5%–25%) and transaminases (5%). Although our patients had mild hyperkalemia, it is not an established adverse reaction. However, renal injury has been reported.10

Conclusion

Cutaneous leishmaniasis is increasing in prevalence in the United States due to increased foreign travel. Providers should be familiar with the cutaneous presentation of leishmaniasis, even in areas of low prevalence, to limit the risk for mucocutaneous dissemination from infection with the subgenus Viannia. Prompt treatment is vital to ensuring the best prognosis, and first-line treatment with miltefosine should be strongly considered given its efficacy and tolerability.

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