To help prevent the malaria parasite from developing resistance to antimalarial medicines, the WHO recommends the use of combination therapy, where malaria infections are treated with more than one drug simultaneously. As azithromycin is an antibiotic that also has an effect on the malaria parasite, we assessed its efficacy and tolerability as an antimalarial when used alone or as part of combination therapy with other antimalarials. Our review of studies conducted over the past 14 years suggests that azithromycin is a relatively weak antimalarial whose efficacy depends on the drug dose and the partner drug in the combination therapy. The data suggest that, among adults, the higher doses needed to achieve an acceptable level of treatment success with malaria may be less well tolerated. Unless the ongoing product and dose optimisation process results in a universally efficacious product or identifies a specific niche application that is complementary to the current scala of more efficacious antimalarial combinations, azithromycin's future as an antimalarial does not look promising.
Azithromycin is not useful as monotherapy for uncomplicated malaria. In combinations with other antimalarials, it may need to be used at high doses, potentially affecting tolerability.
Published Online:
May 11, 2011
Health topics:
More like this
- Atovaquone-proguanil appears to be more effective than individual drugs for treating uncomplicated malaria, but there are few data comparing atovaquone-proguanil to other combination therapies
- Artemisinin drugs for treating uncomplicated malaria are better used in combination therapy
- Artemether-lumefantrine (four-dose regimen) for treating uncomplicated malaria
- Artemether-lumefantrine (six-dose regimen) for treating uncomplicated malaria
- Intrarectal quinine versus intravenous or intramuscular quinine for treating Plasmodium falciparum malaria
