| Literature DB >> 34120139 |
Jialiang Sun1, Yanan Li2.
Abstract
Macrolide antibiotics are one of the most commonly used broad-spectrum antibiotics. They have an inhibitory effect on a variety of respiratory pathogens; besides, they have non-anti-infective effects, including anti-inflammatory, regulating airway secretion, immune regulation, and other effects. A growing number of studies have shown that the non-anti-infective effects of macrolides have important and potential value in the treatment of pediatric chronic airway diseases; the therapy was described as "long-term, low-dose usage"; unfortunately, there is no guideline or consensus that applies to children. To better carry out the mechanism and clinical research of non-anti-infective effect and promote its rational use in children, the authors summarize the evidence of the usage of long-term, low-dose macrolide antibiotic therapy (LLMAT) in the treatment of chronic airway diseases in children and the progress in recent years. IMPACT: This review summarizes the evidence (mostly in recent 5 years) of the usage of long-term, low-dose macrolide antibiotic therapy in the treatment of chronic airway diseases. The recent studies and guidelines support and enrich the point that long-term, low-dose macrolide antibiotic therapy has potential benefit for children with severe asthma, CF, non-CF bronchiectasis, and BO, which provides clinical references and is of clinical interest. Long-term, low-dose macrolide antibiotic therapy has good safety, and no serious events have been reported; however, potential cardiac side effects and macrolide resistance should be clinically noted.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34120139 PMCID: PMC9122820 DOI: 10.1038/s41390-021-01613-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Res ISSN: 0031-3998 Impact factor: 3.953
Immunomodulatory effects of macrolides on chronic airway diseases.
| Effects | Mechanism | Targets | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-inflammation | Cell signaling regulation | Interference in the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) system | Reduce inflammation gene expression and regulate cell growth differentiation |
| Modulating the expression of transcription factors (especially NF-kB) | |||
| Interfere with inflammatory cells and cytokines | Decrease in TGF-β1, PDGF, VEGF | Improve chronic airway inflammation and airway remodeling | |
| Interference with the proliferation of fibroblasts and vascular endothelial cells | |||
| Prevention in the recruitment of eosinophils via inhibition of eosinophil-activated chemokines and IL-5 release | |||
| Improve Th2 inflammation via decrease in IL-4 and IL-13 | |||
| Prevention in the recruitment of neutrophils via inhibition of IL-8 and TNF-α | |||
| Airway secretion regulation | Cell signaling regulation | Interference with intracellular calcium and chloridion signaling pathway | Decrease in airway water and mucus secretion |
| Partial activation of the muscarine receptor | |||
| Interfere with inflammatory cells and cytokines | Inhibition of submucosal mucous adenocytes (goblet cell) via decrease in TNF-α and IL-13 | ||
| Immunomodulatory-related antimicrobial effects | Inhibition of microbial adhesion | Inhibition of plant hemagglutinin, hemolysin, etc. | Antimicrobial effect below MIC |
| Inhibition of virulence factors | Inhibition of exotoxin A, elastase, etc. | ||
| Biofilm inhibition | Inhibition of alginate synthesis in biofilms | ||
| Impair the quorum-sensing system | Blocking expression of signals known as “autoinducers” |