

BY MARY ANN MOON
Elsevier Global Medical News
Daily azithromycin prevented acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease when it was added to usual treatment in a 1-year study, thus improving patients’ quality of life.
The drug also cut the colonization of certain respiratory pathogens. On the downside, it increased colonization with macrolide-resistant organisms and induced hearing decrements in approximately 5% of patients, said Dr. Richard K. Albert, FCCP, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado at Denver and chief of medicine at Denver Health, and his associates.
“Given the deleterious effects of acute exacerbations of COPD with respect to the risk of death, quality of life, loss of lung function, and cost of care, adding azithromycin to the treatment regimen [of at-risk patients] is a valuable option,” they noted.
However, QTc prolongation is a contraindication to the drug, and patients who are at risk for the cardiac disorder should be monitored if they are given azithromycin. Hearing also should be monitored in all patients. “In addition, it should be recognized that the long-term effects of this treatment on microbial resistance in the community are not known,” the investigators said.
Macrolide antibiotics like azithromycin have immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory properties in addition to their antibacterial action. Several small studies have examined their use in preventing acute exacerbations of COPD, with conflicting results. “Accordingly, we conducted a large, randomized trial to test the hypothesis that azithromycin decreases the frequency of acute exacerbations of COPD when added to the usual care of these patients,” said Dr. Albert and his colleagues in the COPD Clinical Research Network.
The prospective study involved 1,142 patients aged 40 years and older who were at risk for acute exacerbations and were randomly assigned to receive either 250 mg of oral azithromycin (570 subjects) or an identical-looking placebo (572 subjects) once daily for 1 year. All were already using inhaled glucocorticoids, long-acting beta-agonists, muscarinic antagonists, and/or continuous supplemental oxygen.
These subjects were followed at 17 sites associated with academic health centers across the United States.
The primary outcome measure – time to the first acute exacerbation of COPD – was significantly increased in the patients taking azithromycin (266 days), compared with those taking placebo (174 days). The hazard ratio of having an acute exacerbation per patient-year was 0.73 in the azithromycin group, compared with the placebo group.
These differences remained significant after the data were adjusted to account for differences between the two groups in sex, forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), age, and smoking status, the researchers said (N. Engl. J. Med. 2011;365:689-98).
There were 1,641 acute exacerbations of COPD during the study, and the number was significantly lower in the active-treatment group (741) than in the placebo group (900). “The number needed to treat to prevent one acute exacerbation of COPD was 2.86,” they said.
More patients in the azithromycin group than in the placebo group showed significant improvements in quality of life scores.
There were no significant differences between the two groups in the frequency of serious adverse events or of adverse events that prompted discontinuation of treatment. Audiograms showed hearing decrements in 25% of patients taking azithromycin, compared with 20% of those taking placebo.
Among study subjects whose nasopharyngeal swabs showed colonization with respiratory pathogens at baseline, the later prevalence of organisms that were resistant to macrolides was comparable whether they took azithromycin or placebo. In contrast, among subjects who became colonized during the study, the rate of macrolide resistance was twice as high in those taking azithromycin (81%) as in those taking placebo (41%).
Dr. Albert and his associates added that they chose the 250-mg dose of azithromycin to minimize the chance of insufficient dosing, and chose daily rather than less-frequent administration to maximize adherence. “It is possible that lower doses or less frequent administration could have produced similar results,” Dr. Albert and his colleagues said.
VITALS
Major Finding: Adding oral azithromycin (250
mg daily) to usual care for COPD increased the
time to an acute exacerbation from 174 days to
266 days, and reduced the frequency of acute
exacerbations.
Data Source: A 1-year prospective, multicenter,
randomized clinical trial involving 1,142
patients at risk for COPD exacerbations.
Disclosures: This study was funded by the National
Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the
COPD Clinical Research Network. Dr. Albert reported
ties to Gilead Sciences, the Bruce Fagel
Law Firm, Elsevier, and Denver Health, and his
associates reported ties to numerous industry
sources including Pfizer, marketer of Zithromax.