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Long-term erythromycin therapy is associated with decreased chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations

Long-term erythromycin therapy is associated with decreased chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations
Long-term erythromycin therapy is associated with decreased chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations
Rationale:

Frequent chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbations are a major cause of hospital admission and mortality and are associated with increased airway inflammation. Macrolides have airway antiinflammatory actions and may reduce the incidence of COPD exacerbations.

Objectives: To determine whether regular therapy with macrolides reduces exacerbation frequency.

Methods:

We performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of erythromycin administered at 250 mg twice daily to patients with COPD over 12 months, with primary outcome variable being the number of moderate and/or severe exacerbations (treated with systemic steroids, treated with antibiotics, or hospitalized).

Measurements and main results:

We randomized 109 outpatients: 69 (63%) males, 52 (48%) current smokers, mean (SD) age 67.2 (8.6) years, FEV1 1.32 (0.53) L, FEV1% predicted 50 (18)%. Thirty-eight (35%) of the patients had three or more exacerbations in the year before recruitment, with no differences between treatment groups. There were a total of 206 moderate to severe exacerbations: 125 occurred in the placebo arm. Ten in the placebo group and nine in the macrolide group withdrew.

Generalized linear modeling showed that the rate ratio for exacerbations for the macrolide-treated patients compared with placebo-treated patients was 0.648 (95% confidence interval: 0.489, 0.859; P = 0.003) and that these patients had shorter duration exacerbations compared with placebo. There were no differences between the macrolide and placebo arms in terms of stable FEV1, sputum IL-6, IL-8, myeloperoxidase, bacterial flora, serum C-reactive protein, or serum IL-6 or in changes in these parameters from baseline to first exacerbation over the 1-year study period.

Conclusions:

Macrolide therapy was associated with a significant reduction in exacerbations compared with placebo and may be useful in decreasing the excessive disease burden in this important patient population. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 00147667).
FEV1, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbation, macrolide, exacerbation frequency
1073-449X
1139-1147
Seemungal, Terence A.R.
d0fd9512-1ebc-47e3-8398-6477c90b358e
Wilkinson, Tom M.A.
8c55ebbb-e547-445c-95a1-c8bed02dd652
Hurst, John R.
37c4256e-b20f-4df0-ada0-cf3cbd59ecdf
Perera, Wayomi R.
e1b2cfd4-a695-46f7-8e96-e156bc4e2abb
Sapsford, Ray J.
bd6328f0-f2ec-4b1c-994b-1fc0aebe007a
Wedzicha, Jadwiga A.
da6d3d6a-9098-4681-9ab6-b5bad0325e52
Seemungal, Terence A.R.
d0fd9512-1ebc-47e3-8398-6477c90b358e
Wilkinson, Tom M.A.
8c55ebbb-e547-445c-95a1-c8bed02dd652
Hurst, John R.
37c4256e-b20f-4df0-ada0-cf3cbd59ecdf
Perera, Wayomi R.
e1b2cfd4-a695-46f7-8e96-e156bc4e2abb
Sapsford, Ray J.
bd6328f0-f2ec-4b1c-994b-1fc0aebe007a
Wedzicha, Jadwiga A.
da6d3d6a-9098-4681-9ab6-b5bad0325e52

Seemungal, Terence A.R., Wilkinson, Tom M.A., Hurst, John R., Perera, Wayomi R., Sapsford, Ray J. and Wedzicha, Jadwiga A. (2008) Long-term erythromycin therapy is associated with decreased chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 178 (11), 1139-1147. (doi:10.1164/rccm.200801-145OC).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Rationale:

Frequent chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbations are a major cause of hospital admission and mortality and are associated with increased airway inflammation. Macrolides have airway antiinflammatory actions and may reduce the incidence of COPD exacerbations.

Objectives: To determine whether regular therapy with macrolides reduces exacerbation frequency.

Methods:

We performed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study of erythromycin administered at 250 mg twice daily to patients with COPD over 12 months, with primary outcome variable being the number of moderate and/or severe exacerbations (treated with systemic steroids, treated with antibiotics, or hospitalized).

Measurements and main results:

We randomized 109 outpatients: 69 (63%) males, 52 (48%) current smokers, mean (SD) age 67.2 (8.6) years, FEV1 1.32 (0.53) L, FEV1% predicted 50 (18)%. Thirty-eight (35%) of the patients had three or more exacerbations in the year before recruitment, with no differences between treatment groups. There were a total of 206 moderate to severe exacerbations: 125 occurred in the placebo arm. Ten in the placebo group and nine in the macrolide group withdrew.

Generalized linear modeling showed that the rate ratio for exacerbations for the macrolide-treated patients compared with placebo-treated patients was 0.648 (95% confidence interval: 0.489, 0.859; P = 0.003) and that these patients had shorter duration exacerbations compared with placebo. There were no differences between the macrolide and placebo arms in terms of stable FEV1, sputum IL-6, IL-8, myeloperoxidase, bacterial flora, serum C-reactive protein, or serum IL-6 or in changes in these parameters from baseline to first exacerbation over the 1-year study period.

Conclusions:

Macrolide therapy was associated with a significant reduction in exacerbations compared with placebo and may be useful in decreasing the excessive disease burden in this important patient population. Clinical trial registered with www.clinicaltrials.gov (NCT 00147667).

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More information

Published date: 21 August 2008
Keywords: FEV1, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbation, macrolide, exacerbation frequency
Organisations: Infection Inflammation & Immunity

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 153391
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/153391
ISSN: 1073-449X
PURE UUID: 895736f4-4383-46bc-8afc-3e3529eaa277

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 May 2010 15:31
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:27

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Contributors

Author: Terence A.R. Seemungal
Author: John R. Hurst
Author: Wayomi R. Perera
Author: Ray J. Sapsford
Author: Jadwiga A. Wedzicha

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