INTRODUCTION
Chagas disease is an endemic zoonosis that affects 8 million people worldwide, originating in Latin America, and endemic in 21 Latin American countries1. The reach of the parasite is expanding due to globalization and the increasing number of infections occurring in developed countries, such as the USA, Spain, and Japan. More than 100 years after it was first described, there remain only two available drugs for treatment, namely, benznidazole (BZN) and nifurtimox. These drugs have been in use for more than four decades, and the discovery of new drugs is urgently needed. However, in some countries, such as Brazil, BZN is the only available drug, which is highly active in the acute phase of the disease but its efficacy in the chronic phase of Chagas disease remains controversial. Moreover, there is little evidence to support BZN as totally effective in parasite elimination2–4, and some studies have observed efficiency only in the indeterminate form of the chronic phase in children5–7. These drugs have also shown questionable efficacy in the chronic phase and several adverse reactions have been reported, mainly in adults, such as anorexia, weight loss, nausea, vomiting, insomnia, depression, convulsions, dizziness, headache, drowsiness, muscle pain, loss of balance, mental confusion, memory problems, peripheral neuropathies, mucosal edema, liver intolerance, and cutaneous manifestations8–11. Since discovering the disease, no drug has shown efficacy for the indeterminate and chronic phases of the disease12–17. One step towards achieving success in new drug development involves adequate animal in vivo testing. Development of a mouse model with chronic Chagas disease is difficult and depends on the choice of the animal, the strain of Trypanosoma cruzi (T. cruzi) the amount of inoculated parasite load, confirmation of the disease stage, time/dose of the drug in tests, and maintenance of animal survival at the end of the experiment. The current study presents the experimental animal models that have been used and highlights the effect of BZN in the indeterminate and determinate chronic infection phases.
The most recent in vivo model that can identify the parasite during the experimental procedure is based on modified parasites that are highly sensitive to in vivo imaging, using a bioluminescence imaging system based on T. cruzi18–20. However, this methodology is not extensively used in every laboratory. Table 1, Table 2 and Table 3 indicate the studies that have reported the effect of BZN in indeterminate/chronic infections and the experiments for chronic infections in several T. cruzi strains (Table 1 17–19,22, Table 217,18,21–23, Table 3 18,24–29).
TABLE 1: Experimental studies involving chronic phase Chagas disease in animal models with immunosuppression: BZN = 100mg/kg/day.
T. cruzistrain | Mice | Inoculum | Start of treatment (dpi) | BZN (mg/kg/day) | Treatment (duration) | Immunosuppression | Results | Reference | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parasitemia (reactivation) | PCR, or Serological test | Amastigotes presence | ||||||||
JRcl4* | C3H | 104 | 161** | 100 | 5 | ▲ | positive | ND | ND | 17 |
CL Brener* | BALB/c | 103 | 90** | 100 | 20 days | β | negative | ND | ND | 18 |
CL Brener* | BALB/c and CB17 SCID | 103 | 103** | 100 | 5 days | κ | positive | negative (PCR) | Negative | 19 |
CL Brener* | BALB/c and CB17 SCID | 103 | 103** | 100 | 10 days | κ | positive | negative (PCR) | Positive | |
CL Brener* | BALB/c and CB17 SCID | 103 | 74** | 100 | 20 days | λ | negative | negative (PCR) | Positive | |
CL Brener or Y | C57BL/6 | 103 | 35*** | 100 | 10 days | Θ | ND | positive (PCR) | ND | 22 |
CL Brener or Y | C57BL/6 | 103 | 35*** | 100 | 15 days | Θ | ND | positive (PCR) | ND | |
CL Brener or Y | C57BL/6 | 103 | 35*** | 100 | 20 days | Θ | ND | negative(PCR) | ND | |
CL Brener or Y | C57BL/6 | 106 | 35*** | 100 | 20 days | θ | ND | negative (PCR) | ND |
BZN: benznidazole; T. cruzi: Trypanosoma cruzi; dpi: days post-infection; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; ND: not determined; ▲: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 175, 179, and 183 dpi; bid: bis in die (twice daily); β: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 124, 127, 130, and 133 dpi; κ:cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 124, 128, and 132 dpi; λ: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 113, 118, and 128 dpi; θ: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) four cycles of cyclophosphamide with each cycle lasting one week. *Bioluminescent bloodstream-form of T. cruzi. **Chronic phase; ***Late acute phase.
TABLE 2: Experimental studies involving chronic phase Chagas disease in animal models with immunosuppression: BZN ≤ 50 mg/kg/day.
T. cruzistrain | Mice | Inoculum | Start of treatment(dpi) | BZN (mg/kg/day) | Treatment (duration) | immunosuppression | Results | Reference | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parasitemia (reactivation) | PCR, or Serological test | Amastigotes presence | ||||||||
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 104 | 124 or 126** | 10 | 10 days | • | positive | ND | ND | 17 |
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 104 | 124 or 126** | 10 | 20 days | • | positive | ND | ND | |
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 104 | 124 or 126** | 30 | 5 days | # | positive | ND | ND | |
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 104 | 124 or 126 *** | 30 | 10 days | † | positive | ND | ND | |
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 104 | 124 or 126** | 30 | 20 days | † | negative | ND | ND | |
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 104 | 114** | 50 bid | 10 days | α | negative | ND | ND | |
CL Brener* | Balb/c | 103 | 90** | 10 | 20 days | β | positive | ND | ND | 18 |
Y* | Balb/c | 104 | 126** | 50 | 28 days | ε | negative | ND | ND | 21 |
CL Brener or Y | C57BL/6 | 103 | 35*** | 30 | 20 days | Θ | ND | positive (PCR) | ND | 22 |
CL Brener or Y | C57BL/6 | 103 | 35*** | 10 | 20 days | θ | ND | positive (PCR) | ND | |
Y and Peruvian | Swiss | 4 x 103 | At 5 to 6 months** | 50 | 5 days | γ | positive | positive (serological) | positive | 23 |
21SF | Swiss | 4 x 103 | At 5 to 6 months** | 50 | 5 days | δ | positive | positive (serological) | Positive | |
Bolivia, Colombia and Montalvania | Swiss | 5 x104, 3 x 105 | At 3 to 5 months** | 50 | 5 days | γ | positive | positive (serological) | Positive |
BZN: benznidazole; T. cruzi: Trypanosoma cruzi; dpi: days post-infection; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; ND: not determined; •: cyclophosphamide (200mg kg−1) by i.p. injection every 4 days for a maximum of 3 doses; #: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 138, 142, and 146 dpi; †:cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 154, 158, and 162 dpi. α: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 135, 139, and 143 dpi; β: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) on days 124, 127, 130, and 133 dpi; ε:cyclophosphamide (200mg kg−1) by i.p. injection during 2 days at 3-day intervals; θ: cyclophosphamide (200mg/kg) four cycles of cyclophosphamide with each cycle lasting one week; γ: Azathioprine (2mg/kg/day) gavage, betamethasone (1mg/kg/day), cyclosporine (16, 10, 8 and 6 mg/kg/day); δ:Azathioprine (10mg/kg/day) gavage, betamethasone (2 mg/kg/day), cyclosporine (30mg/kg/day) gavage. *Bioluminescent bloodstream-form of T. cruzi. **Chronic phase. ***Late acute phase.
TABLE 3: Experimental studies involving chronic phase Chagas disease in animal models without immunosuppression.
T. cruzistrain | Mice | Inoculum | Start of treatment(dpi) | BZN (mg/kg/day) | Treatment (duration) | immunosuppression | Results | Reference | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Parasitemia (reactivation) | PCR, or Serological test | Amastigotes presence | ||||||||
CL Brener* | BALB/c | 103 | 66** | 100 | 5 days | – | negative | ND | ND | 18 |
Clone CL Brener B5 | BALB/c | 102 | 90** | 20 | 20 days | – | ND | ND | positive | 24 |
Clone CL Brener B5 | BALB/c | 102 | 90** | 50 | 20 days | – | ND | ND | positive | |
Tulahuen and SGO-Z12 | Swiss | 5 x 10 | 180** | 100 | 30 days | – | negative | ND | ND | 25 |
H510C8C3 clone | 148 CF1 | 105 | 90** | 25 | 60 days | – | negative | negative (PCR) / positive (serological) | negative | 26 |
Colombian | BALB/c | 102 | 45** | 100 | 7 days followed weekly for 8 months | – | ND | ND | positive | 27 |
20 Different Clonal Genotypes | BALB/c | 104 | 90** | 100 | 20 days | – | positive | positive (serological) | ND | 28 |
Seven clones – Colombian resistant Strain | Swiss | 5 x 104, 1 x 105 | 20*** | 100 | 70 days | – | positive | positive (PCR and serological) | ND | 29 |
BZN: benznidazole; T. cruzi: Trypanosoma cruzi; dpi: days post-infection; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; ND: not determined; -: without immunosuppression. *Bioluminescent bloodstream-form of T. cruzi. **Chronic phase. ***Late acute phase.
Immunosuppression alters the natural development of the disease, predetermining the development or reactivation of opportunistic infections. This is especially true for Chagas disease30,31, particularly in animal models, where immunosuppression is simply applied to evaluate a sterile cure. This effect occurs despite efforts to produce a perfect chronic phase model that involves the use of BZN.
A current strategy in use involves therapeutic doses of BZN as part of a combination therapy for Chagas disease. This entails therapeutic regimens with low concentrations to decrease toxicity and consequently reduce side effects due to typical BZN therapy. One study32 has evaluated the effect of an antihypertensive medication in association with a standard anti-T. cruzi drug. That study used enalapril (25mg/kg) and BZN (100mg/kg) separately and together for 30 days in animal models infected with the VL-10 strain of T. cruzi, mainly to evaluate chronic cardiac inflammatory parameters, levels of chemokines (CCL2, CCL5), IL-10, creatine kinases (CKs), and C-reactive protein serum 120 days post-infection. The authors reported that the combination of enalapril and BZN could decrease the biomarker levels of CK, CK-MB, and C-reactive proteins during the chronic phase of the disease, and also reduce the intensity of inflammatory infiltrates in the heart. Two years later, the same authors33 evaluated this same therapeutic combination (enalapril/BZN) during the chronic phase of the disease in an animal model infected with the VL-10 strain of T. cruzi. However, in their latter study they used several different concentrations: BZN (100, 80, and 60mg/kg), enalapril (25, 20, and 15mg/kg), and both (100 + 25; 80 + 20; 60 +15mg/kg, respectively). These concentrations were administered for 20 days orally by gavage, and euthanization occurred 120 days post-infection. This was performed to decrease toxicity and cardiac lesions, as well as to produce the same anti-T. cruzi effect. Their data demonstrated that a therapeutic combination resulted in an approximate 20% decrease in the parameter concerning inflammatory infiltrates when compared to standard BZN therapy. However, the therapeutic combination (100 +25 and 80 +20mg/kg) enhanced IL-10 levels, and also decreased cardiac inflammatory infiltrates evaluated in the histopathological analysis.
In addition to combination therapy, other strategies to overcome the extended duration and toxicity of treatment have included identification of new therapeutic targets for Chagas disease, drug discovery, drug repositioning, and re-dosing regimens for current drugs. In this context, researchers have optimized Chagas therapy using BZN/itraconazole in different doses (50, 75, and 100mg/kg), and evaluated the therapeutic effect in an animal model infected with the Y strain of T. cruzi. When compared to compound-only groups (100mg/kg), the combination therapy (BZN/itraconazole) showed a decrease in the treatment duration required to reduce the trypomastigote forms in animals. The concomitant treatment also showed excellent immunomodulatory activity, mainly at the concentration of 75mg/kg, with a four-fold enhancement reported compared to the compound-only groups (100mg/kg)34.
Researchers35 have evaluated the concomitant treatment of BZN/pentoxifylline (25/20mg/kg, respectively) during 30 consecutive days with mice chronically infected with the Colombian strain of T. cruzi. The combination therapy showed a reduction of approximately 79% of amastigote nests, which is 3% more active than standard therapy with BZN (76%). A decrease in myocarditis, fibrosis, TNF expression (37%) in heart tissue, and improved electrical changes were also shown. These studies reinforce the importance of investigating previously-marketed drugs, particularly concomitant therapy with BZN against T. cruzi. This approach may provide a better quality of life for patients with Chagas disease and, for example, improve cardiac inflammatory levels, reduce biomarkers, and decrease treatment duration, as well as its concentration. As such, further studies concerning concomitant therapy for chronic Chagas disease are essential.
As well as smaller mammals such as rabbits and rats36,37, larger animal models including dogs and non-human primates38–50 are also used for experimental studies, mainly in Chagas disease, due to these mammals’ capacity to host parasites. Dogs and non-human primates (baboons, macaques, and capuchin monkeys) have been important experimental models to study the pathogenesis of Chagas disease, mainly in regard to the immunopathogenic mechanisms involved in the chronic phase of T. cruzi infection38,42–50. Electrocardiography alterations39,40,47,49have been reported in studies of dogs and non-human primates infected with several T. cruzi strains as well in studies using BZN chemotherapy in dogs who received the same regimen as humans (7mg/kg), corroborating with the outcomes of other clinical trials42. Despite the variety of available experimental assays intended to simulate the T. cruzi infection, mice models have demonstrated more advantages than other experimental models, due to ease of handling, housing, greater sample numbers, and low cost, as well as the need to use a smaller drug quantity for the biological assays. In contrast, with larger animal models, the number of animals in a study is associated with ethical and cost considerations.
Considering that complete elimination is unlikely, the concentration of BZN should be decreased in the chronic phase of this disease in accordance with all the observed examples. Treatment can then be completed without interruption while enabling parasite reduction, and with less damage to tissue.
LIMITED EFFECT IN HUMANS
Human treatment with BZN is limited due to side effects, and BZN does not provide a cure for the chronic phase of Chagas disease. BZN administration using several different doses and treatment durations has shown no cure for patients in the chronic phase. In a clinical trial conducted with 195 patients using different BZN doses of between 50 and 500mg/day (equivalent of 5mg/kg/day), approximately 30% of patients who received between 50 and 200mg/day discontinued treatment because of treatment side effects51.
Several studies conducted in chronically-infected patients using different concentrations of BZN showed adverse effects, and treatment discontinuity occurred52–55. One study involved 80 asymptomatic patients with Chagas disease who were treated with BZN (5mg/kg twice daily for 60 days)56. The efficacy of BZN was evaluated over a period of three years, and only 5% of patients presented improvements. Another study57 monitored 13 patients chronically infected with Chagas disease. They were treated with BZN 5mg/kg for 60 days. The accompaniment this patients lasted for more than four years and showed a decrease in the number of anti-T cruzi antibodies in 69% of patients (9 of 13 patients).
Researchers at the Chagas Disease Center in Buenos Aires58, Argentina, evaluated 566 patients (range, between 30 and 50 years of age), with 3 positive results on serologic tests (no cardiac failure). Half (n=283) of the patients received 5mg/kg of BZN over 30 days, and the other half (n=283) went without treatment. The study reported that BZN treatment increased negative seroconversion in the chagasic patients and decreased the disease progression, principally reducing cardiac alterations due to the parasite. This result confirmed the limitations of BZN therapy in the chronic phase of Chagas disease, but should not be used as an argument for inefficacy.
THE TRANSITION TO CLINICAL TRIALS: A CHALLENGE FOR THE EXPERIMENTAL MODELS
In recent years, results from clinical trials involving Chagas disease have been reported and new azole derivatives such as posaconazole, ravuconazole, and E1224 (ravuconazole prodrug) have been evaluated. Using crystallographic studies (PDB code: 3K1O), posaconazole demonstrated good enzyme inhibition and good affinity. The drug showed activity against T. cruzi during in vitro studies against the epimastigote and amastigote forms of the parasite, and also during in vivo studies in the chronic model of the disease. Furthermore, the compound showed activity against drug-resistant strains of T. cruzi, such as the Y and Colombian strains. Posaconazole has also been evaluated in clinical phase studies (ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT01377480) in Argentina, Bolivia, and Spain, and has been compared to BZN in adults with chronic Chagas disease. Preliminary results of these studies have shown that posaconazole was clearly inferior compared to standard therapy, possibly due to lower systemic bioavailability. After reporting this result, the pharmaceutical company, Merck, began a second attempt to investigate the co-administration of posaconazole and BZN59–65. However, researchers have recently reported that the drug candidate posaconazole was less active than BZN in highly sensitive models of bioluminescent T. cruzi66. In the same way, ravuconazole (8) and compound E-1224 (9) (a ravuconazole prodrug) have also shown potent in vitroactivity against T. cruzi. Although ravuconazole has an unfavorable pharmacokinetic profile in animal models (characterized with a very short elimination half-life), its pharmacokinetic parameters in humans have led to clinical trials of E-1224 (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01489228). The results of these trials demonstrated that this compound did not remain effective after one year of treatment when compared to BZN. In addition, the incidence and severity of adverse effects at high doses led to discontinuation of treatment in the phase II clinical trial67–70.
Despite efforts, and the number and quality of available experimental models intended to simulate Chagas disease, the results were disappointing in the clinical trials. Specifically, more confident predictions of the efficacy of these new drugs is required prior to starting clinical trials. Therefore, it is extremely important that better and safer methods are identified to improve the transition to clinical trials.
SCIENTIFIC CHALLENGES
More active compounds to treat the chronic phase of Chagas disease are urgently required and toxicity needs to be a strongly considered factor in the development of these compounds. The use of drug combinations that eliminate the intracellular parasites should not cause large quantities of tissue lesions. The best experimental protocol is one that effectively relates to human response.
The data shown here suggest that, for an experimental protocol in animals chronically infected with Chagas disease, treatment at lower doses (<100mg/kg/day) of BZN is more advantageous and may be used as a basis to compare new drugs with BZN during the chronic phase of Chagas disease.