R. Haye et al., EFFICACY AND SAFETY OF AZITHROMYCIN VERSUS PHENOXYMETHYLPENICILLIN INTHE TREATMENT OF ACUTE MAXILLARY SINUSITIS, European journal of clinical microbiology & infectious diseases, 15(11), 1996, pp. 849-853
In the treatment of acute maxillary sinusitis, azithromycin offers an
advantage over phenoxymethylpenicillin in that a complete course of tr
eatment requires drug administration once daily for only three days. I
n this double-blind, parallel-group, multicenter study, 438 patients w
ith radiographically verified maxillary sinusitis were randomly assign
ed to receive either 500 mg azithromycin once daily for three days (22
1 patients) or 1.3 g phenoxymethylpenicillin three times daily for ten
days (217 patients). Nasal secretion, maxillary tenderness and pain,
nasal obstruction, general malaise, and hyposmia, were assessed at the
start of the study and on days 4, 11, and 25 of treatment. After 11 d
ays 58% of the patients in the azithromycin group were cured versus 51
% in the penicillin group; after 25 days the cure rate was 79% versus
76%, respectively. When both cure and improvement were considered, the
corresponding figures after 11 days were 97% (azithromycin) and 95% (
penicillin); after 25 days they were 92% and 88%, respectively. Advers
e events, predominantly gastrointestinal, occurred in 73 (33%) of the
azithromycin-treated patients and in 87 (40.1%) of those treated with
penicillin. No difference in efficacy was found between the two drugs
in the treatment of acute maxillary sinusitis, and the adverse effects
were comparable, The short duration of treatment with azithromycin of
fers a significant advantage over treatment with phenoxymethylpenicill
in.