van Eijk Anna M, Terlouw Dianne J
Child & Reproductive Health Group, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, UK, L3 5QA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Feb 16;2011(2):CD006688. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006688.pub2.
To prevent the development of drug resistance, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends treating malaria with combination therapy. Azithromycin, an antibiotic with antimalarial properties, may be a useful additional option for antimalarial therapy.
To compare the use of azithromycin alone or in combination with other antimalarial drugs with the use of alternative antimalarial drugs for treating uncomplicated malaria caused by Plasmodium falciparum or Plasmodium vivax.
We searched the Cochrane Infectious Diseases Group Specialized Register (August 2010); CENTRAL (The Cochrane Library Issue 3, 2010); MEDLINE (1966 to August 2010); EMBASE (1974 to August 2010); LILACS (August 2010); the metaRegister of Controlled Trials (mRCT, August 2010); conference proceedings; and reference lists. We also contacted researchers and a pharmaceutical company.
Randomized controlled trials comparing azithromycin, either alone or combined with another antimalarial drug, with another antimalarial drug used alone or combined with another antimalarial drug, or with azithromycin combined with another antimalarial drug if different combinations or doses of azithromycin were used. The primary outcome was treatment failure by day 28, defined as parasitological or clinical evidence of treatment failure between the start of treatment and day 28. Secondary outcomes included treatment failure by day 28 corrected for new infections confirmed by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), fever and parasite clearance time, and adverse events.
Two people independently applied the inclusion criteria, extracted data and assessed methodological quality. We used risk ratio (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI).
Fifteen trials met the inclusion criteria (2284 participants, 69% males, 16% children). They were conducted in disparate malaria endemic areas, with the earlier studies conducted in Thailand (five) and India (two), and the more recent studies (eight) spread across three continents (South America, Africa, Asia). The 15 studies involved 41 treatment arms, 12 different drugs, and 28 different treatment regimens. Two studies examined P. vivax.Three-day azithromycin (AZ) monotherapy did not perform well for P. vivax or P. falciparum (Thailand: P. vivax failure rate 0.5 g daily, 56%, 95% CI 31 to 78. India: P. vivax failure rate 1 g daily,12%, 95% CI 7 to 21; P. falciparum failure rate 1 g daily, 64%, 95% CI 36 to 86.) A 1 g azithromycin and 0.6 g chloroquine combination daily for three days for uncomplicated P. falciparum infections was associated with increased treatment failure in India and Indonesia compared with the combination of sulphadoxine-pyrimethamine and chloroquine (pooled RR 2.66, 95% CI 1.25 to 5.67), and compared with the combination atovaquone-proguanil in a multicentre trial in Columbia and Surinam (RR 24.72, 95% CI 6.16 to 99.20). No increased risk of treatment failure was seen in two studies in Africa with mefloquine as the comparator drug (pooled RR 2.02, 95% CI 0.51 to 7.96, P = 0.3); the pooled RR for PCR-corrected data for the combination versus mefloquine was 1.01, 95% CI 0.18 to 5.84 (P = 1.0). An increased treatment failure risk was seen when comparing azithromycin in a dose of 1.2 to 1.5 mg in combination with artesunate (200 mg per day for three days) with artemether-lumefantrine (pooled RR 3.08, 95% CI 2.09 to 4.55; PCR-corrected pooled RR 3.63, 95% CI 2.02 to 6.52).Serious adverse events and treatment discontinuation were similar across treatment arms. More adverse events were reported when comparing the 1 g azithromycin/ 0.6 g chloroquine combination with mefloquine (pooled RR 1.20, 95% CI 1.06 to 1.36) or atovaquone-proguanil (RR 1.41, 95% CI 1.09 to1.83).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Currently, there is no evidence for the superiority or equivalence of azithromycin monotherapy or combination therapy for the treatment of P. falciparum or P. vivax compared with other antimalarials or with the current first-line antimalarial combinations. The available evidence suggests that azithromycin is a weak antimalarial with some appealing safety characteristics. Unless the ongoing dose, formulation and product optimisation process results in a universally efficacious product, or a specific niche application is identified that is complementary to the current scala of more efficacious antimalarial combinations, azithromycin's future for the treatment of malaria does not look promising.
为防止耐药性的产生,世界卫生组织(WHO)建议采用联合疗法治疗疟疾。阿奇霉素是一种具有抗疟特性的抗生素,可能是抗疟治疗的一种有用的附加选择。
比较单独使用阿奇霉素或与其他抗疟药物联合使用,与使用其他抗疟药物治疗由恶性疟原虫或间日疟原虫引起的非复杂性疟疾的效果。
我们检索了Cochrane传染病组专业注册库(2010年8月);CENTRAL(Cochrane图书馆2010年第3期);MEDLINE(1966年至2010年8月);EMBASE(1974年至2010年8月);LILACS(2010年8月);对照试验元注册库(mRCT,2010年8月);会议论文集;以及参考文献列表。我们还联系了研究人员和一家制药公司。
随机对照试验,比较单独使用阿奇霉素或与另一种抗疟药物联合使用,与单独使用另一种抗疟药物或与另一种抗疟药物联合使用,或者如果使用了不同组合或剂量的阿奇霉素,则比较阿奇霉素与另一种抗疟药物联合使用的情况。主要结局是第28天的治疗失败,定义为治疗开始至第28天之间治疗失败的寄生虫学或临床证据。次要结局包括经聚合酶链反应(PCR)确认的新感染校正后的第28天治疗失败、发热和寄生虫清除时间以及不良事件。
两人独立应用纳入标准、提取数据并评估方法学质量。我们使用风险比(RR)和95%置信区间(CI)。
15项试验符合纳入标准(2284名参与者,69%为男性,16%为儿童)。这些试验在不同的疟疾流行地区进行,早期的研究在泰国(5项)和印度(2项)进行,最近的研究(8项)分布在三大洲(南美洲、非洲、亚洲)。15项研究涉及41个治疗组、12种不同药物和28种不同治疗方案。两项研究针对间日疟原虫。三日阿奇霉素(AZ)单药疗法对间日疟原虫或恶性疟原虫效果不佳(泰国:间日疟原虫每日0.5克失败率为56%,95%CI为31%至78%。印度:间日疟原虫每日1克失败率为12%,95%CI为7%至21%;恶性疟原虫每日1克失败率为64%,95%CI为36%至86%)。对于非复杂性恶性疟原虫感染,每日1克阿奇霉素与0.6克氯喹联合使用三天,与磺胺多辛-乙胺嘧啶和氯喹联合使用相比,在印度和印度尼西亚治疗失败率增加(合并RR为2.66,95%CI为1.25至5.67),在哥伦比亚和苏里南的一项多中心试验中与阿托伐醌-氯胍联合使用相比(RR为24.72,95%CI为6.16至99.20)。在非洲的两项以甲氟喹作为对照药物的研究中未发现治疗失败风险增加(合并RR为2.02,95%CI为0.51至7.96,P = 0.3);联合用药与甲氟喹经PCR校正数据的合并RR为1.01,95%CI为0.18至5.84(P = 1.0)。将剂量为1.2至1.5毫克的阿奇霉素与青蒿琥酯(每日200毫克,共三天)联合使用与蒿甲醚-本芴醇相比,治疗失败风险增加(合并RR为3.08,95%CI为2.09至4.55;经PCR校正的合并RR为3.63,95%CI为2.02至6.52)。各治疗组的严重不良事件和治疗中断情况相似。将1克阿奇霉素/0.6克氯喹联合使用与甲氟喹(合并RR为1.20,95%CI为1.06至1.36)或阿托伐醌-氯胍(RR为1.41,95%CI为1.09至1.83)相比,报告的不良事件更多。
目前,没有证据表明阿奇霉素单药疗法或联合疗法在治疗恶性疟原虫或间日疟原虫方面优于或等同于其他抗疟药物或当前的一线抗疟联合用药。现有证据表明,阿奇霉素是一种效力较弱的抗疟药物,具有一些吸引人的安全特性。除非正在进行的剂量、剂型和产品优化过程产生一种普遍有效的产品,或者确定一个与当前更有效的抗疟联合用药范围互补的特定小众应用,否则阿奇霉素在疟疾治疗方面的前景并不乐观。