Current Recommendations and Future Prospects in the Treatment of Toxoplasmosis
Published Dec 1, 1989 · R. Mccabe, S. Oster
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Abstract
SummaryToxoplasma infection is highly prevalent throughout the world and causes disease in diverse populations. Effective treatment regimens are available for each clinical entity of toxoplasma, but problems of incomplete clinical efficacy, drug potency, drug safety, and length of treatment remain. No well-controlled clinical trials in humans have been performed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of treatment.Primary treatment of toxoplasmosis is with the Synergistic combination of pyrimethamine and sulphonamide. This is considered the treatment of choice for severe disease, disease in immunocompromised patients, and congenital toxoplasmosis. Spiramycin, a macrolide antibiotic, is frequently used alone or alternately with pyrimethamine and sulphonamide for pregnant women with the acute acquired infection to prevent congenital toxoplasmosis. Clindamycin is used frequently to treat acute flares of toxoplasmic chorioretinitis and as second-line therapy for toxoplasmic encephalitis in patients with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).Inadequacies in the treatment of toxoplasmosis in immunosuppressed patients, exemplified by experience with AIDS patients, should provide the impetus for well-designed trials to find and evaluate more potent and better-tolerated agents. Classes of new drugs that have been investigated and show some promise include: (a) macrolides (roxithromycin, azithromycin); (b) folic acid antagonists (piritrexim and trimetrexate), and (c) purine analogues (arprinocid). Immunomodulators have attracted interest, and interferon-γ alone and in combination with roxithromycin is effective in murine models. Interleukin-2 is also effective in the murine model.