Amoxicillin [78–80] | 6 (78); 3 (79); 5 (80) | Three open label studies following failure of oral antibiotics | Sputum purulence | Continuous; 4 months/16 weeks | Bronchiectasis patients with purulent sputum that failed to clear following oral amoxicillin | Reduced sputum purulence; reduced neutrophil elastase activity ; reduced sputum volume; improved PEFR. | No issues identified. |
Tobramycin [81] | A: 37; P: 37 | Phase II study | P. aeruginosa bacterial load | 28 days treatment (total duration 8 weeks) | P. aeruginosa-colonised patients; mean age 66 versus 63 years; FEV1 mean 56 versus 53% | Significant reduction in P. aeruginosa load (mean difference 4.56 log10 cfu·mL−1, p<0.01); 13/37 cleared P. aeruginosa from sputum; no significant change in FEV1, p=0.41. | Increased dyspnoea, chest pain and wheezing; new resistance to tobramycin in 4/36. |
Gentamicin [82] | A: 27; P: 30 | Single-blind randomised controlled trial | Bacterial load | 12 months | Patients colonised with any pathogens in at least three sputum samples in the preceding 12 months; two exacerbations in the previous year; able to tolerate test dose of gentamicin; FEV1 >30% predicted; exsmokers of >1 year; not on long-term antibiotics. | Significant difference in bacterial load at 12 months (2.96 log10 cfu·mL−1 versus 7.67 log10 cfu·mL−1, p<0.0001); reduction in exacerbations (median 0 in the gentamicin group, 1.5 in the saline group, p<0.0001); improved SGRQ and LCQ scores; reduced airway inflammation. | Bronchospasm in 21.9%, two withdrawals; elevated serum gentamicin levels required dose reduction in one patient; no resistant isolates detected. |
Colistin [83] | A: 73; P: 71 | Phase III double-blind randomised controlled trial | Time to first exacerbation | 6 months (patients withdrawn following exacerbation) | P. aeruginosa-colonised patients (two or more positive cultures in 12 months) and within 21 days of completing antipseudomonal antibiotics for an exacerbation. | Missed primary end-point (colistin 165 days, placebo 111 days, p=0.11); improved SGRQ (mean difference −10.5 points, p=0.006); improved time to first exacerbation in patients taking >80% of doses. | Five patients (7%) developed bronchoconstriction leading to discontinuation; no resistant strains at follow-up. |
Aztreonam [84] | AIR-BX1: A: 134; P: 132. AIR-BX2: A: 136; P: 138 | 2× phase III double-blind randomised controlled trial | QOL-B questionnaire score at week 4 | Two 28 day treatment courses with alternating 28 day off treatment | Positive sputum for P. aeruginosa or other Gram-negative organisms (excluding H.influenzae) FEV1 >20% predicted; chronic sputum production. | No difference in QOL-B at week 4 (mean difference 0.8 (95% CI −3.1–4.7, p=0.7) in AIR-BX1 and 4.6 (1.1–8.2, p=0.011) in AIR-BX2); no difference in QOL-B in both studies at week 12 (p=0.56 in both studies); no difference in time to first exacerbation. | AIR-BX1 adverse events leading to discontinuation: 22 versus 6%; AIR-BX2- adverse events leading to discontinuation: 10 versus 5%. |
Ciprofloxacin DPI [86] | A: 60; P: 64 | Phase II double blind randomised controlled trial | Bacterial load | 28 days treatment with follow-up to 84 days | Idopathic or post-infective bronchiectasis; two or more exacerbations in the previous 12 months (one hospitalisation); able to produce sputum; culture positive for target microorganisms. | Mean difference in bacterial load −3.62 log10 cfu·mL−1 versus −0.27 log10 cfu·mL−1, p<0.001; no significant differences in proportion of patients with exacerbations (36.7 versus 39.1%, p=0.6); no significant difference in SGRQ (mean difference −3.56, p=0.059). | 10% of patients developed resistance (MIC >4 mg·L−1) in the ciprofloxacin group; no difference in adverse events between groups. |
Liposomal ciprofloxacin [87] | A: 20; P: 22 | Phase II study double blind randomised controlled trial | Bacterial load after first 28-day treatment cycle with intervening 28-day off periods) | 24 weeks (three 28 day treatment cycles) | P. aeruginosa-colonised patients; >2 exacerbations in previous 12 months. | Reduction in P. aeruginosa bacterial load −4.2 versus −0.08 log10 cfu·mL−1, p=0.002; reduced number of exacerbations in the active treatment group (OR 0.2 95% CI 0.04–0.89, p=0.027); median time to pulmonary exacerbations reduced in the per protocol population (p=0.046). | No significant difference in minimal inhibitory concentrations to ciprofloxacin at day 28; no increase in adverse events. |