| Literature DB >> 30065581 |
Jung Eun Kim1, A Young Park1, Sung Yul Lee1, Young Lip Park2, Kyu Uang Whang3, Hyun-Jung Kim4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acne vulgaris is one of the most common disorders of the pilosebaceous unit. Although doxycycline is considered to be a first-line anti-acne antibiotic, various other antibiotics have been tried due to its adverse effects and contraindications. We performed a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that compared the efficacy of oral azithromycin pulse therapy with that of oral daily doxycycline in the management of moderate to severe acne vulgaris.Entities:
Keywords: Acne vulgaris; Azithromycin; Doxycycline; Meta-analysis
Year: 2018 PMID: 30065581 PMCID: PMC6029975 DOI: 10.5021/ad.2018.30.4.417
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Dermatol ISSN: 1013-9087 Impact factor: 1.444
Fig. 1Flow diagram of study identification, inclusion, and exclusion.
Characteristics of the six randomized controlled trials included in the final analysis
| Study (year) | No. of patient | Age (yr) | Treatments protocol | Methods of evaluating efficacies | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Azithromyci n group (n=452) | Doxycycline group (n=454) | Azithromycin group | Doxycycline group | |||
| Parsad et al. (2001) | 30 (6.6) | 30 (6.6) | ≥16 | Azithromycin 500 mg 4 d/mo+topical 0.05% tretinoin | 100 mg doxycycline once daily+topical 0.05% tretinoin cream | 1. Investigator's assessment of treatment using a 4 point scale |
| Kus et al. (2005) | 25 (5.5) | 26 (5.7) | 18~30 | Azithromycin 500 mg 3 d/wk (1st mo), 2 d/wk (2nd mo), once a week (3rd mo) | Doxycycline 100 mg twice a day (1st mo), once daily (2nd mo, 3rd mo) | 1. Facial inflammatory, non-inflammatory acne lesion counts |
| 2. Patient's own assessment of treatment using a 5 point scale | ||||||
| 3. Investigator's assessment of treatment (treatment responses were expressed as percentages) | ||||||
| Babaeinejad et al. (2011) | 50 (11.1) | 50 (11.0) | ≥13 | Azithromycin 500 mg 4 d/mo | 100 mg doxycycline once daily | 1. Investigator's assessment of treatment (treatment responses were expressed as percentages) |
| Maleszka et al. (2011) | 120 (26.5) | 120 (26.4) | ≥14 | Azithromycin 500 mg 3 d/wk (1st wk), followed by 500 mg weekly | 100 mg doxycycline twice a day (1st d), followed by 100 mg doxycycline once daily | 1. Facial inflammatory acne lesion counts |
| 2. Investigator's assessment of treatment (treatment responses were expressed as percentages) | ||||||
| Moravvej et al. (2012) | 34 (7.5) | 35 (7.7) | 18~30 | Azithromycin 500 mg 3 d/wk | 100 mg doxycycline daily | 1. Facial inflammatory, non-inflammatory acne lesion counts |
| 2. Patient's own assessment of treatment using a 5 point scale | ||||||
| 3. Investigator's assessment of treatment (treatment responses were expressed as percentages) | ||||||
| Ullah et al. (2014) | 193 (42.7) | 193 (42.5) | 14~30 | Azithromycin 500 mg 4 d/mo | 100 mg doxycycline daily | 1. Investigator's assessment of treatment (treatment responses were expressed as percentages) |
Fig. 2Forest plot of the meta-analysis for clinical outcome measures. (A) Remaining acne lesion counts. (B) Patient's self-assessment of treatment. (C) Investigator's assessment of treatment. SD: standard deviation, IV: inverse variance, CI: confidence interval, df: degree of freedom, M-H: Mantel-Haenszel.
Fig. 3Forest plot of the meta-analysis for sensitivity analysis. (A) Remaining inflammatory acne lesion counts. (B) Investigator's assessment of treatment. SD: standard deviation, IV: inverse variance, CI: confidence interval, df: degree of freedom, M-H: Mantel-Haenszel.
Serious adverse events leading to the discontinuation of therapy
| Severe side effect | Doxycycline | Azithromycin |
|---|---|---|
| Severe diarrhea | 0 | 4 |
| Severe nausea | 2 | 0 |
| Severe epigastric pain | 3 | 0 |
| Photosensitivity | 3 | 0 |
| Vaginitis | 2 | 0 |
| Abnormal blood cell count | 1 | 0 |
| Severe vertigo | 1 | 0 |