Journal article
Leishmaniasis: Current treatment and prospects for new drugs and vaccines
L Kedzierski, A Sakthianandeswaren, JM Curtis, PC Andrews, PC Junk, K Kedzierska
Current Medicinal Chemistry | BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD | Published : 2009
Abstract
Leishmaniasis is a disease that ranges in severity from skin lesions to serious disfigurement and fatal systemic infection. WHO estimates that the disease results in 2 million new cases a year, threatens 350 million people in 88 countries and that there are 12 million people currently infected worldwide. Current treatment is based on chemotherapy, which relies on a handful of drugs with serious limitations such as high cost, toxicity, difficult route of administration and lack of efficacy in endemic areas. Pentavalent antimonials have been the mainstay of antileishmanial therapy for over 70 years with second line drugs, Amphotericin B and Pentamidine, used in case of antimonial failure. Sinc..
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Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Drs. Emanuela Handman and Nicole LaGruta for critical review of this manuscript. This work was supported by the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council and the NHMRC/ARC Network for Parasitology (LK) and Monash University (PCA and PCJ). KK is an NHMRC RD Wright Research Fellow, AS is a recipient of an NHMRC Biomedical Research Postgraduate Scholarship.