Blindness due to trachoma is a serious public health issue world wide.
The currently recommended treatment of active trachoma with repeated
doses of tetracycline eye ointment has many disadvantages. The new aza
lide antibiotic azithromycin is effective as a single oral dose in the
chemotherapy of genital Chlamydia trachomatis infections, and we have
assessed its efficacy for trachoma treatment. We carried out a random
ised single-blind comparison of azithromycin (a single oral dose of 20
mg/kg) with conventional treatment (6 weeks of topical tetracycline p
lus erythromycin for severe cases) in two villages with endemic tracho
ma in The Gambia. The patients were followed up for 26 weeks from the
start of treatment by an observer unaware of treatment allocation. By
6 months' follow-up, trachoma had resolved in 76 (78%) of 97 subjects
who received azithromycin compared with 70 (72%) of 97 who were treate
d conventionally (95% Cl for difference -6% to 18%). Compliance with b
oth treatments was good, but that for conventional treatment could pro
bably not be achieved outside the research setting. There were no sign
ificant differences in treatment effect, baseline characteristics, or
re-emergent disease between the treatment groups. Azithromycin was wel
l tolerated. As a systemic treatment effective in a single dose it has
important potential for trachoma control.