Asthma diagnosis and treatmentMacrolide antibiotics and asthma treatment
Section snippets
Evidence for increased susceptibility to infections in patients with asthma
Asthmatic individuals have increased susceptibility to rhinovirus infection in that they have more severe and more prolonged lower respiratory tract symptoms and greater reductions in lung function when infected than do healthy subjects.4 The mechanisms of this increased susceptibility are poorly understood, but one mechanism likely to play a significant role has been recently discovered. Primary bronchial epithelial cells from asthmatic subjects infected with rhinovirus in vitro were found to
Role of C pneumoniae and M pneumoniae in stable asthma
We have recently demonstrated that atopic asthmatic adults have increased frequencies of detection of C pneumoniae than do healthy subjects. In this study 74 spouse pairs consisting of an atopic asthmatic volunteer and a nonatopic healthy volunteer underwent regular nasal aspirate sampling, independent of symptoms, every 2 weeks during a 3-month period. The spouse pair design was undertaken to match for exposure to infectious agents as closely as possible. In atopic asthmatic patients 23 (6.4%)
Role of C pneumoniae and M pneumoniae in asthma exacerbations
Viral infections have been established by a number of studies to be associated with 80% to 85% of asthma exacerbations in children and around 70% to 75% of asthma exacerbations in adults. Virus infections have also been shown to interact with both allergen exposure9 and air pollution10 in increasing the risk of exacerbation and the severity of lower respiratory tract symptoms, respectively, indicating that viruses frequently interact with other cofactors in increasing the risk/severity of
Macrolide and ketolide antibacterial agents
A number of different antibacterial agents have activity against C pneumoniae and M pneumoniae, including tetracyclines, macrolides (azithromycin, clarithromycin, erythromycin, and roxithromycin), and the ketolide telithromycin. Newer macrolides accumulate intracellularly and have good activity against atypical organisms.
The ketolides are a new class of antibacterial agents related to macrolides but that have structural modifications that confer a broader range of antibacterial activity.
Role of macrolides in patients with stable asthma
A Cochrane review of macrolide treatment studies in patients with chronic stable asthma identified only 5 studies (including 357 patients) that met the required criteria (randomized placebo-controlled study of macrolide therapy of >4 weeks' duration).14 There was an overall positive effect on symptoms with macrolide therapy. However, these were not sufficiently consistent to permit recommendations regarding clinical care.
Furthermore, only one study investigated atypical bacterial infection,
Role of macrolides in asthma exacerbations
Current treatment guidelines indicate that antibiotics should not be given routinely in the treatment of acute exacerbations of asthma because evidence indicates viral infections to be the major cause. However, the evidence discussed above for a possible contributing role for atypical bacterial infection in acute exacerbations has prompted a recent study investigating the role of an antibiotic active against these infections.
The Telithromycin, Chlamydophila, and Asthma (TELICAST) study is a
Conclusions and future studies required
There is increasing evidence that infection with atypical bacteria plays a role in the pathogenesis of stable asthma, as well as in asthma exacerbations. The TELICAST study provides evidence of a therapeutic benefit with treatment with a ketolide antibiotic in asthma exacerbations. These finding are provocative and require confirmation but, if confirmed, could open new avenues for the treatment of asthma phenotypes not adequately served by currently available therapies. It will also be
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Cited by (45)
What's the deal with efferocytosis and asthma?
2021, Trends in ImmunologyCitation Excerpt :Macrolide antibiotics, such as azithromycin, have anti-inflammatory effects and have been reported to promote efferocytosis in lung macrophages [99]. Similarly, studies have demonstrated that the macrolide antibiotic, telithromycin, can significantly reduce asthmatic symptoms and improve lung function in patients with moderate-to-severe asthma [100]. Drugs that modulate phagocytosis are also possible candidates.
Asthma exacerbations: Origin, effect, and prevention
2011, Journal of Allergy and Clinical ImmunologyCitation Excerpt :However, Strunk et al121 did not demonstrate any superiority of azithromycin over placebo in a study of children in which the primary outcome was time from randomization to inadequate asthma control. In the case of RSV, treatment of infants with bronchiolitis with clarithromycin led to reduced systemic inflammation acutely and fewer wheezing episodes in the following 6 months.122 Although this was a small study, a much larger study of asthmatic adults randomized to receive either telithromycin, a ketolide antibiotic, or placebo resulted in a greater reduction in asthma symptom scores and lung function in the ketolide-treated group.48
Nontuberculous mycobacterial infection as a cause of difficult-to-control asthma: A case-control study
2011, ChestCitation Excerpt :In vitro studies in human tissue show that NTM are only able to adhere to damaged mucosa, which may be present in patients with asthma, unlike M tuberculosis, which adheres to intact mucosa.15 Regardless of the mechanism, the association between asthma and respiratory infections is well documented, with increased susceptibility to rhinovirus infection,16,17 invasive pneumococcal disease,18 and atypical bacteria such as Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Chlamydophila pneumoniae.19–22 We believe that NTM should now be added to the list of infections that are seen more commonly in patients with asthma.
Bacterial Infections and Pediatric Asthma
2010, Immunology and Allergy Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :In clinical practice, however, antibiotics are prescribed more frequently for respiratory tract infection if the children have asthma compared with non-asthmatic children.50,51 Data from adults suggest that patients with an asthma exacerbation may benefit from treatment with macrolides, ketolides, tetracyclines or fluoroquinolones.52,53 Five studies including 357 adults with asthma were accepted in a systematic review,54 and macrolides had a beneficial effect on symptoms and eosinophilic markers of inflammation, but only in patients with serologic evidence of Chlamydophila infection Table 3.
Disclosure of potential conflict of interest: S. Johnston has consulting arrangements with Sanofi-Aventis, Pfizer, and GlaxoSmithKline.