Macrolide antibiotics and the risk of cardiac arrhythmias.
Author(s): Albert RK(1), Schuller JL; COPD Clinical Research Network.
Affiliation(s): Author information:
(1)1 Denver Health, Denver, Colorado; and.
Publication date & source: 2014, Am J Respir Crit Care Med. , 189(10):1173-80
Randomized, controlled trials have demonstrated that chronic therapy with
macrolide antibiotics reduces the morbidity of patients with cystic fibrosis,
non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and
nontuberculous mycobacterial infections. Lower levels of evidence indicate that
chronic macrolides are also effective in treating patients with panbronchiolitis,
bronchiolitis obliterans, and rejection after lung transplant. Macrolides are
known to cause torsade des pointes and other ventricular arrhythmias, and a
recent observational study prompted the FDA to strengthen the Warnings and
Precautions section of azithromycin drug labels. This summary describes the
electrophysiological effects of macrolides, reviews literature indicating that
the large majority of subjects experiencing cardiac arrhythmias from macrolides
have coexisting risk factors and that the incidence of arrhythmias in absence of
coexisting risk factors is very low, examines recently published studies
describing the relative risk of arrhythmias from macrolides, and concludes that
this risk has been overestimated and suggests an approach to patient evaluation
that should reduce the relative risk and the incidence of arrhythmias to the
point that chronic macrolides can be used safely in the majority of subjects for
whom they are recommended.
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