Article Text

Efficacy and safety of azithromycin 1.5% eye drops in paediatric population with purulent bacterial conjunctivitis
  1. Dominique Bremond-Gignac1,2,
  2. Hachemi Nezzar3,4,
  3. Paolo Emilio Bianchi5,
  4. Riadh Messaoud6,
  5. Sihem Lazreg7,
  6. Liliana Voinea8,
  7. Claude Speeg-Schatz9,
  8. Dahbia Hartani10,
  9. Thomas Kaercher11,
  10. Beata Kocyla-Karczmarewicz12,
  11. Joaquim Murta13,
  12. Laurent Delval14,
  13. Didier Renault14,
  14. Frédéric Chiambaretta3,15,
  15. for the AZI Study Group
  1. 1Service d'Ophtalmologie, Centre Saint Victor, CHU d'Amiens, Université Picardie Jules Verne, Amiens, France
  2. 2INSERM UMRS968, Institut de la Vision, Université Paris 6, Paris, France
  3. 3Service d'Ophtalmologie, Hôpital Gabriel Montpied, CHU Clermont-Ferrand, Clermont-Ferrand, France
  4. 4IGCNC-EA7282-UMR6284 ISIT, UFR Médecine, Université d'Auvergne, Clermont Université, Clermont-Ferrand, France
  5. 5University Eye Clinic, IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo Foundation, Pavia, Italy
  6. 6Service d'Ophtalmologie, Hôpital Régional de la Madhia, CHU Tahar Sfar de Mahdia, Mahdia, Tunisie
  7. 7Cabinet d'Ophtalmologie, Blida, Algérie
  8. 8Ophthalmology Department, University Emergency Hospital, Bucharest, Romania
  9. 9Service d'Ophtalmologie, CHU de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France
  10. 10Service d'Ophtalmologie, CHU Mustapha, Alger, Algérie
  11. 11Augenarztpraxis, Dossenheimer Landstr, Heidelberg, Germany
  12. 12Ophthalmology Department, The Children's Memorial Health Institute, Warsaw, Poland
  13. 13Faculty of Medicine, Department of Ophthalmology, Centro Hospitalar Universitário Coimbra, University of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal
  14. 14Laboratoires THÉA, Clermont-Ferrand, France
  15. 15EA 7281 R2D2, Laboratoire de Biochimie Médicale, Faculté de Médecine, Université d'Auvergne, Clermont-Ferrand, France
  1. Correspondence to Professor Dominique Bremond-Gignac, Service d'Ophtalmologie, Centre Saint Victor, CHU d'Amiens, 354 Bd de Beauville, Amiens 80054, France; bremond.dominique{at}chu-amiens.fr

Abstract

Objective To determine the efficacy and safety of azithromycin 1.5% eye drops in a paediatric population with purulent bacterial conjunctivitis.

Patients and methods This was a multicentre, international, randomised, investigator-masked study in 286 children with purulent discharge and bulbar conjunctival injection. Patients received either azithromycin 1.5% eye drops (twice daily for 3 days) or tobramycin 0.3% eye drops (every 2 h for 2 days, then four times daily for 5 days). Clinical signs were evaluated on day (D) 0, 3 and 7, and cultures on D0 and D7. The primary variable was the clinical cure (absence of bulbar conjunctival injection and discharge) on D3 in the worse eye for patients with positive cultures on D0.

Results 286 patients (mean age 3.2 years; range 1 day–17 years) were included; 203 had positive cultures on D0. Azithromycin was superior to tobramycin in clinical cure rate on D3 (47.1% vs 28.7%, p=0.013) and was non-inferior to tobramycin on D7 (89.2% vs 78.2%, respectively). Azithromycin treatment eradicated causative pathogens, including resistant species, with a similar resolution rate to tobramycin (89.8% vs 87.2%, respectively). These results were confirmed in a subgroup of patients younger than 24 months old.

Conclusions Azithromycin 1.5% eye drops provided a more rapid clinical cure than tobramycin 0.3% eye drops in the treatment of purulent bacterial conjunctivitis in children, with a more convenient twice-a-day dosing regimen.

  • Child Health (paediatrics)
  • Conjunctiva
  • Infection

This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/

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