The impact of steroids given with macrolide therapy on experimental Mycoplasma pneumoniae respiratory infection. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Systemic steroids have been advocated in addition to antimicrobial therapy for severe Mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia. We evaluated the efficacy of clarithromycin, dexamethasone, and combination therapy for M. pneumoniae respiratory infection. METHODS: Mice infected with M. pneumoniae were treated with clarithromycin, dexamethasone, combined clarithromycin/dexamethasone, or placebo daily; mice were evaluated at baseline and after 1, 3, and 6 days of therapy. Outcome variables included M. pneumoniae culture, lung histopathologic score (HPS), and bronchoalveolar lavage cytokine, chemokine, and growth factor concentrations. RESULTS: Clarithromycin monotherapy resulted in the greatest reductions in M. pneumoniae concentrations. After 3 days of treatment, combination therapy significantly reduced lung HPS compared with placebo, clarithromycin, and dexamethasone alone, whereas, after 6 days of therapy, clarithromycin alone and combination therapy significantly reduced lung HPS compared with placebo. Concentrations of interleukin (IL)-12 p40, RANTES, macrophage chemotactic protein-1, and cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant were significantly lower in mice treated with clarithromycin alone and/or combination therapy compared with dexamethasone alone and/or placebo; combination therapy resulted in a significantly greater reduction than clarithromycin alone for IL-12 p40 and RANTES. CONCLUSIONS: Although monotherapy with clarithromycin had the greatest effect on reducing concentrations of M. pneumoniae, combination therapy had the greatest effect on decreasing levels of cytokines and chemokines as well as pulmonary histologic inflammation.

publication date

  • October 15, 2008

Research

keywords

  • Anti-Bacterial Agents
  • Anti-Inflammatory Agents
  • Clarithromycin
  • Dexamethasone
  • Mycoplasma pneumoniae
  • Pneumonia, Mycoplasma

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2562003

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 54749144115

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1086/591915

PubMed ID

  • 18717637

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 198

issue

  • 8