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Epidemiologic,
laboratory, animal, and clinical studies suggest
that there is an association between Chlamydia
pneumoniae infection and atherogenesis. The
efficacy of one year of azithromycin treatment
for the secondary prevention of coronary events
was evaluated.
In a randomized,
prospective trial, investigators assigned 4012
patients with documented stable coronary artery
disease to receive either 600 mg of azithromycin
or placebo weekly for one year. The participants
were followed for a mean of 3.9 years at 28
clinical centers throughout the United States.
The primary end point,
a composite of death due to coronary heart
disease, nonfatal myocardial infarction,
coronary revascularization, or hospitalization
for unstable angina, occurred in 446 of the
participants who had been randomly assigned to
receive azithromycin and 449 of those who had
been randomly assigned to receive placebo. There
was no significant risk reduction in the
azithromycin group as compared with the placebo
group with regard to the primary end point (risk
reduction, 1 percent [95 percent confidence
interval, -13 to 13 percent]). There were also
no significant risk reductions with regard to
any of the components of the primary end point,
death from any cause, or stroke. The results did
not differ when the participants were stratified
according to sex, age, smoking status, presence
or absence of diabetes mellitus, or C.
pneumoniae serologic status at baseline.
A one-year course of
weekly azithromycin did not alter the risk of
cardiac events among patients with stable
coronary artery disease.
N Engl J Med.
2005;352:1637-1645
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