Heras-Mosteiro Julio, Monge-Maillo Begoña, Pinart Mariona, Lopez Pereira Patricia, Reveiz Ludovic, Garcia-Carrasco Emely, Campuzano Cuadrado Pedro, Royuela Ana, Mendez Roman Irene, López-Vélez Rogelio
Department of Preventive Medicine and Public Health & Immunology and Microbiology, Rey Juan Carlos University, Avda. Atenas s/n, Alcorcón, Madrid, Spain, 28922.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Nov 17;11(11):CD005067. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD005067.pub4.
Cutaneous leishmaniasis, caused by a parasitic infection, is considered one of the most serious skin diseases in many low- and middle-income countries. Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis (OWCL) is caused by species found in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, the Mediterranean, and India. The most commonly prescribed treatments are antimonials, but other drugs have been used with varying success. As OWCL tends to heal spontaneously, it is necessary to justify the use of systemic and topical treatments. This is an update of a Cochrane Review first published in 2008.
To assess the effects of therapeutic interventions for the localised form of Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis.
We updated our searches of the following databases to November 2016: the Cochrane Skin Specialised Register, CENTRAL, MEDLINE, Embase, and LILACS. We also searched five trials registers and checked the reference lists of included studies for further references to relevant randomised controlled trials (RCTs). We wrote to national programme managers, general co-ordinators, directors, clinicians, WHO-EMRO regional officers of endemic countries, pharmaceutical companies, tropical medicine centres, and authors of relevant papers for further information about relevant unpublished and ongoing trials. We undertook a separate search for adverse effects of interventions for Old World cutaneous leishmaniasis in September 2015 using MEDLINE.
Randomised controlled trials of either single or combination treatments in immunocompetent people with OWCL confirmed by smear, histology, culture, or polymerase chain reaction. The comparators were either no treatment, placebo/vehicle, and/or another active compound.
Two review authors independently assessed trials for inclusion and risk of bias and extracted data. We only synthesised data when we were able to identify at least two studies investigating similar treatments and reporting data amenable to pooling. We also recorded data about adverse effects from the corresponding search.
We included 89 studies (of which 40 were new to this update) in 10,583 people with OWCL. The studies included were conducted mainly in the Far or Middle East at regional hospitals, local healthcare clinics, and skin disease research centres. Women accounted for 41.5% of the participants (range: 23% to 80%). The overall mean age of participants was 25 years (range 12 to 56). Most studies lasted between two to six months, with the longest lasting two years; average duration was four months. Most studies were at unclear or high risk for most bias domains. A lack of blinding and reporting bias were present in almost 40% of studies. Two trials were at low risk of bias for all domains. Trials reported the causative species poorly.Here we provide results for the two main comparisons identified: itraconazole (200 mg for six to eight weeks) versus placebo; and paromomycin ointment (15% plus 10% urea, twice daily for 14 days) versus vehicle.In the comparison of oral itraconazole versus placebo, at 2.5 months' follow up, 85/125 participants in the itraconazole group achieved complete cure compared to 54/119 in the placebo group (RR 3.70, 95% CI 0.35 to 38.99; 3 studies; 244 participants). In one study, microbiological or histopathological cure of skin lesions only occurred in the itraconazole group after a mean follow-up of 2.5 months (RR 17.00, 95% CI 0.47 to 612.21; 20 participants). However, although the analyses favour oral itraconazole for these outcomes, we cannot be confident in the results due to the very low certainty evidence. More side effects of mild abdominal pain and nausea (RR 2.36, 95% CI 0.74 to 7.47; 3 studies; 204 participants) and mild abnormal liver function (RR 3.08, 95% CI 0.53 to 17.98; 3 studies; 84 participants) occurred in the itraconazole group (as well as reports of headaches and dizziness), compared with the placebo group, but again we rated the certainty of evidence as very low so are unsure of the results.When comparing paromomycin with vehicle, there was no difference in the number of participants who achieved complete cure (RR of 1.00, 95% CI 0.86, 1.17; 383 participants, 2 studies) and microbiological or histopathological cure of skin lesions after a mean follow-up of 2.5 months (RR 1.03, CI 0.88 to 1.20; 383 participants, 2 studies), but the paromomycin group had more skin/local reactions (such as inflammation, vesiculation, pain, redness, or itch) (RR 1.42, 95% CI 0.67 to 3.01; 4 studies; 713 participants). For all of these outcomes, the certainty of evidence was very low, meaning we are unsure about these results.Trial authors did not report the percentage of lesions cured after the end of treatment or speed of healing for either of these key comparisons.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There was very low-certainty evidence to support the effectiveness of itraconazole and paromomycin ointment for OWCL in terms of cure (i.e. microbiological or histopathological cure and percentage of participants completely cured). Both of these interventions incited more adverse effects, which were mild in nature, than their comparisons, but we could draw no conclusions regarding safety due to the very low certainty of the evidence for this outcome.We downgraded the key outcomes in these two comparisons due to high risk of bias, inconsistency between the results, and imprecision. There is a need for large, well-designed international studies that evaluate long-term effects of current therapies and enable a reliable conclusion about treatments. Future trials should specify the species of leishmaniasis; trials on types caused by Leishmania infantum, L aethiopica, andL donovani are lacking. Research into the effects of treating women of childbearing age, children, people with comorbid conditions, and those who are immunocompromised would also be helpful.It was difficult to evaluate the overall efficacy of any of the numerous treatments due to the variable treatment regimens examined and because RCTs evaluated different Leishmania species and took place in different geographical areas. Some outcomes we looked for but did not find were degree of functional and aesthetic impairment, change in ability to detect Leishmania, quality of life, and emergence of resistance. There were only limited data on prevention of scarring.
皮肤利什曼病由寄生虫感染引起,在许多低收入和中等收入国家被认为是最严重的皮肤病之一。旧世界皮肤利什曼病(OWCL)由在非洲、亚洲、中东、地中海地区及印度发现的利什曼原虫物种引起。最常用的治疗药物是锑剂,但也使用过其他药物,疗效各异。由于OWCL往往会自愈,因此有必要说明全身治疗和局部治疗的合理性。这是Cochrane系统评价的更新版,该评价首次发表于2008年。
评估针对局限性旧世界皮肤利什曼病的治疗性干预措施的效果。
我们将以下数据库的检索更新至2016年11月:Cochrane皮肤专业注册库、Cochrane中心对照试验注册库(CENTRAL)、医学索引数据库(MEDLINE)、荷兰医学文摘数据库(Embase)和拉丁美洲及加勒比地区卫生科学数据库(LILACS)。我们还检索了5个试验注册库,并检查纳入研究的参考文献列表,以获取更多相关随机对照试验(RCT)的参考文献。我们写信给国家项目管理人员、总协调员、主任、临床医生、流行国家的世界卫生组织东地中海区域办事处官员、制药公司、热带医学中心以及相关论文的作者,以获取有关未发表和正在进行的相关试验的更多信息。我们于2015年9月使用MEDLINE对旧世界皮肤利什曼病干预措施的不良反应进行了单独检索。
经涂片、组织学、培养或聚合酶链反应确诊为OWCL的免疫功能正常人群中,单药或联合治疗的随机对照试验。对照为不治疗、安慰剂/赋形剂和/或另一种活性化合物。
两位综述作者独立评估试验是否纳入及偏倚风险,并提取数据。只有当我们能够识别至少两项研究类似治疗方法并报告可合并数据的研究时,才进行数据合成。我们还记录了相应检索中有关不良反应的数据。
我们纳入了89项研究(其中40项是本次更新新增的),涉及10583例OWCL患者。纳入的研究主要在远东或中东地区的区域医院、当地医疗诊所和皮肤病研究中心进行。女性占参与者的41.5%(范围:23%至80%)。参与者的总体平均年龄为25岁(范围12至56岁)。大多数研究持续两到六个月,最长持续两年;平均持续时间为四个月。大多数研究在大多数偏倚领域处于不清楚或高风险状态。近40%的研究存在缺乏盲法和报告偏倚的情况。两项试验在所有领域的偏倚风险均较低。试验对病原体物种的报告较差。在此,我们提供两项主要比较的结果:伊曲康唑(200mg,服用六至八周)与安慰剂;以及巴龙霉素软膏(15%加10%尿素,每日两次,共14天)与赋形剂。
在口服伊曲康唑与安慰剂的比较中,随访2.5个月时,伊曲康唑组125名参与者中有85名实现完全治愈,而安慰剂组119名参与者中有54名实现完全治愈(RR 3.70,95%CI 0.35至38.99;3项研究;244名参与者)。在一项研究中,皮肤病变的微生物学或组织病理学治愈仅在伊曲康唑组出现,平均随访2.5个月(RR 17.00,95%CI 0.47至612.21;20名参与者)。然而,尽管分析结果倾向于口服伊曲康唑用于这些结局,但由于证据确定性极低,我们对结果无法确信。与安慰剂组相比,伊曲康唑组出现更多轻度腹痛和恶心的副作用(RR 2.36,95%CI 0.74至7.47;3项研究;204名参与者)以及轻度肝功能异常(RR 3.08,95%CI 0.53至17.98;3项研究;84名参与者)(还有头痛和头晕的报告),但同样,我们将证据确定性评为极低,因此对结果不确定。
在比较巴龙霉素与赋形剂时,实现完全治愈的参与者数量没有差异(RR为1.00,95%CI 0.86,1.17;383名参与者,2项研究),且平均随访2.5个月后皮肤病变的微生物学或组织病理学治愈情况也无差异(RR 1.03,CI 0.88至1.20;383名参与者,2项研究),但巴龙霉素组有更多皮肤/局部反应(如炎症、水疱形成、疼痛、发红或瘙痒)(RR 1.42,95%CI 0.67至3.01;4项研究;713名参与者)。对于所有这些结局,证据确定性都非常低,这意味着我们对这些结果不确定。试验作者未报告这两项关键比较中治疗结束后病变治愈的百分比或愈合速度。
关于伊曲康唑和巴龙霉素软膏对OWCL在治愈方面(即微生物学或组织病理学治愈以及参与者完全治愈的百分比)的有效性,证据确定性极低。与对照相比,这两种干预措施引发的不良反应更多,且性质较轻,但由于该结局的证据确定性极低,我们无法得出关于安全性的结论。由于偏倚风险高、结果不一致以及不精确,我们对这两项比较中的关键结局进行了降级。需要开展大规模、设计良好的国际研究,以评估当前疗法的长期效果,并得出关于治疗的可靠结论。未来的试验应明确利什曼病的物种;缺乏针对婴儿利什曼原虫、埃塞俄比亚利什曼原虫和杜氏利什曼原虫所致类型的试验。研究育龄妇女、儿童、合并症患者以及免疫功能低下者的治疗效果也会有所帮助。由于所研究的治疗方案各异,且RCT评估的利什曼原虫物种不同,研究地点也不同,因此很难评估众多治疗方法中任何一种的总体疗效。我们寻找但未找到的一些结局包括功能和美学损害程度、检测利什曼原虫能力的变化、生活质量以及耐药性的出现。关于预防瘢痕形成的数据非常有限。