Title: U.S. Food and Drug Administration
1U.S. Food and Drug Administration
- Notice Archived Document
- The content in this document is provided on the
FDAs website for reference purposes only. It was
current when produced, but is no longer
maintained and may be outdated.
2 Importance of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- John H. Powers, MD
- Lead Medical Officer
- Antimicrobial Drug Development and Resistance
Initiatives - Office of Drug Evaluation IV
- Center for Drug Evaluation and Research
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration
3Introduction
- Background on macrolide antimicrobials
- Background on ranking process of importance of
antimicrobials in human medicine - Ranking process applied to macrolides
- Uses of macrolides in human medicine
4Macrolides
- Erythromycin derived in 1952 from strain of
Streptomyces erythreus from soil in Philippines - Structure
- 14-membered macrocyclic lactone ring
- Related azalide class has 15-membered ring
- FDA approved drugs
- erythromycin
- clarithromycin
- azithromycin
- dirithromycin
- telithromycin
Structure of erythromycin
5Importance of Antimicrobials in Human Medicine
- Desire to preserve usefulness of antimicrobials
of greatest importance in treatment of human
disease - Guidance 152 includes categorization of drugs
based on relative importance in human medicine - drugs ranked as critically important, highly
important or important in human medicine based on
several factors - considered in hazard identification and
consequence assessments of Guidance - Joint CVM-CDER team developed criteria for
categorization of drugs
6Importance of Antimicrobials in Human Medicine
- Developing criteria important to ensure fair
approach and lack of bias in ranking - Criteria presented at open public meeting in
October 2002 and Anti-Infective Drugs Advisory
Committee (AIDAC) meeting in January 2003 - Criteria refined based on AIDAC advice with input
from animal health industry at open public
hearing part of meeting - Ranking based solely on importance of drugs in
human medicine and not degree of transmissibility
of resistance from animals to humans
7Importance of Antimicrobials in Human Medicine
- Criteria
- 1) Antimicrobial used to treat enteric pathogens
that cause food borne disease - 2) Sole therapy or one of few alternatives to
treat serious human disease or drug is essential
component among many antimicrobials in treatment
of human disease - 3) Antimicrobials used to treat enteric pathogens
in non-food-borne disease - 4) No cross-resistance within drug class and
absence of linked resistance with other drug
classes - 5) Difficulty in transmitting resistance elements
within or across genera and species of organisms
8Importance of Antimicrobials in Human Medicine
- Drugs that meet criteria 1 AND 2 considered
critically important - Drugs that meet criteria 1 OR 2 considered highly
important - Drugs that meet any of criteria 3, 4 , or 5
considered important
9Importance of Antimicrobials in Human Medicine
- Ranking of macrolides
- treatment of diarrheal disease due to
Campylobacter species - macrolides are one of few alternatives in
treating potentially lethal diseases - treatment of community-acquired pneumonia due to
Legionella pneumophila (Legionnaires Disease) - treatment of pertussis due to Bordetella
pertussis (whooping cough) in children and adults - Treatment and prevention of disseminated
infection due to Mycobacterium avium in patient
with AIDS - fulfills both criteria 1 and 2 critically
important
10Uses of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- Disease caused by Campylobacter species
- Disease caused by Campylobacter species are among
the most common bacterial infections in the world - Can cause both diarrheal and systemic illness and
- Complications of diarrheal disease e.g.
Guillain-Barre syndrome and reactive arthritis - One of most common cause of bloody diarrhea in
the U.S.
11Uses of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- Disease caused by Campylobacter species
- Self-resolving disease most common but can cause
fatal disease at the extremes of age and in
immunocompromised hosts - Treatment recommended in patients with more
severe forms of disease like dysentery -
treatment appears more effective when given early
in course of illness - Macrolides are drugs of choice
- studied in placebo controlled trials
- recommended by IDSA Guidelines
- alternatives such as quinolones and tetracyclines
are not recommended in some patient populations
such as children
12Uses of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- Legionnaires Disease
- intracellular pathogen Legionella pneumophila
- causes potentially lethal form of pneumonia
- initial description in 1976 outbreak 34 out of
182 persons died - subsequent studies show pneumonia due to L.
pneumophila to be the second most common cause of
pneumonia in patients admitted to ICUs with
mortality of approximately 20 - macrolides and quinolones only drugs proven
effective in treatment of disease, with most
experience with macrolides
13Uses of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- Disease due to Mycobacterium avium -
intracellulare complex - disseminated disease usually occurs in patients
with advanced AIDS, pulmonary disease in non-AIDS - widespread organ involvement in liver, spleen,
and other organs - disease consists of fever, drenching night
sweats, and weight loss, anemia requiring blood
transfusions - usual course without treatment is progressive
clinical deterioration although not direct cause
of death - Mainstay of prevention is clarithromycin or
azithromycin treatment with these drugs plus
ethambutol
14Uses of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- Pertussis
- disease caused by Bordetella pertussis most
commonly known as whooping cough - causes 40 million cases worldwide and 360,000
deaths in data from 1994 with increases in some
countries due to lack of vaccination - most common in children but up to 20 - 30 of
adults with prolonged cough may have the disease - macrolides considered drugs of choice
15Uses of Macrolides in Human Medicine
- Other uses of macrolides
- prevention of recurrence of peptic ulcer disease
due to Helicobacter pylori - commonly used as one of many alternatives in
upper respiratory tract diseases and pneumonia - one macrolide is the best selling antibiotic
worldwide demonstrating how commonly these drugs
are used
16Macrolide Resistance
- Resistance occurs by two mechanisms
- efflux pump due to mefA mutation - low level
resistance with cross resistance to other
macrolides that may remain susceptible to
clindamycin and streptogramins, telithromycin in
some cases - ribosomal mutation in ermB - high level
resistance that may confer resistance to all
macrolides (with potential exception of
telithromycin for some organisms), clindamycin
and streptogramins - Clinical significance of resistance varies with
organism and disease setting - appears to be clinically meaningful in some
diseases like disseminated MAC, PUD with H.
pylori - clinical significance in upper respiratory
disease less clear
17Conclusions
- Macrolides are important drugs in the treatment
and prevention of human disease - According to criteria discussed at previous
meetings, macrolides are ranked as critically
important in human medicine - Macrolides treat or prevent disease due to
gastrointestinal pathogens - Macrolides either the sole or one of few
therapies used to treat a variety of infections