I did a lot of research into this, and the answer is sadly no. There is no good, safe treatment for toxoplasmosis. The current best treatment is simulataneous dosing of two ultra-strong antibiotics for two months. Such a course wreaks havoc on the body, and is properly only recommended in severely immuno-compromised individuals (late-stage HIV, etc.).
As concerns about the latent infection mount, however, experts have begun thinking about more-aggressive steps to counter the parasite’s spread. Inoculating cats or livestock against T. gondii might be one way to interrupt its life cycle, offers Johns Hopkins’ Robert Yolken. Moving beyond prevention to treatment is a taller order. Once the parasite becomes deeply ensconced in brain cells, routing it out of the body is virtually impossible: the thick-walled cysts are impregnable to antibiotics. Because T. gondii and the malaria protozoan are related, however, Yolken and other researchers are looking among antimalarial agents for more-effective drugs to attack the cysts. But for now, medicine has no therapy to offer people who want to rid themselves of the latent infection; and until solid proof exists that Toxo is as dangerous as some scientists now fear, pharmaceutical companies don’t have much incentive to develop anti-Toxo drugs.
I did a lot of research into this, and the answer is sadly no. There is no good, safe treatment for toxoplasmosis. The current best treatment is simulataneous dosing of two ultra-strong antibiotics for two months. Such a course wreaks havoc on the body, and is properly only recommended in severely immuno-compromised individuals (late-stage HIV, etc.).
Seems to be correct. From The Atlantic: