Applied Evidence

When guideline treatment of asthma fails, consider a macrolide antibiotic

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Outcome. Ms. S’s symptoms resolved completely within months.

Evidence of benefit of macrolides in asthma

These 3 cases, taken from my practice (but with names changed), demonstrate the therapeutic potential of macrolide antibiotics for patients with asthma under specific clinical circumstances. The cases are referenced again in the following examination of the literature on macrolides for asthma

SIDEBAR
Macrolides for Asthma: Registry of Clinical Experience

More information is needed about the “real world” effectiveness of antibiotic treatment for severe refractory and new-onset asthma. If you are a prescribing clinician who cares for patients with asthma and you are considering prescribing antibiotics for asthma, you are invited to document your outcomes by entering prospective, de-identified patient data into a human subjects committee-approved online registry. To gain access to the registry, and for more information, contact the author at dlhahn@wisc.edu or visit https://www.fammed.wisc.edu/wren/resources/macrolides-for-asthma/ .

Meta-analysis. Reiter et al4 performed a meta-analysis of 12 randomized clinical trials of macrolides for long-term management of asthma in children and adults. Prolonged treatment was defined as > 3 weeks of continuous administration of a macrolide. The pooled effect of macrolides on forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) was not significant; however, a significant effect on peak expiratory flow, symptom scores, quality of life, and airway hyperreactivity was observed.

Comment: The study’s authors concluded: “Macrolides may therefore be beneficial as adjunct asthma therapy. Future trials, focusing on long-term safety and effectiveness, should use standardized outcomes and ­procedures.”

Cochrane meta-analysis. Kew et al5 performed a meta-analysis of 23 studies of macrolides for managing chronic asthma for the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. In their review, they reported

  • no significant effects of macrolides on asthma exacerbations, asthma control, quality of life, and rescue medication use; and
  • significant effects of macrolides for asthma symptoms and FEV1.

Continue to: Two within-study subgroup...

Pages

Recommended Reading

Severe, uncontrolled asthma patients must avoid subcutaneous immunotherapy
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Age 1 food allergies often disappear by age 6
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Atopic dermatitis at 1 year links with persistent food allergies
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Poor asthma control during pregnancy trims live birth rate
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Getting that Dx right, keeping patients safe
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
In obesity-related asthma, a new hormonal target
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Noninfected children of HIV-positive mothers have high rates of obesity
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Patient and family education of asthma management is critical
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
Asthma hospitalization in kids linked with doubled migraine incidence
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management
One-third of patients with severe asthma are overusing corticosteroids
Journal of Clinical Outcomes Management