Community-acquired respiratory tract infections (RTIs), including acute bacterial sinusitis, acute otitis media, acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis, and community-acquired pneumonia, are among the most frequent infections treated by physicians and represent a major international health problem (
1). Community-acquired pneumonia is one of the leading causes of hospitalization in the United States and the most common cause of death in patients with infectious diseases (
2), while acute otitis media is the most frequent illness for which antimicrobial drugs are prescribed for children in the industrialized world.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is the most common microbial pathogen identified in community-acquired RTIs, and pneumococcal infections are among the leading causes of illness and death worldwide (
3), particularly among children, the elderly, and persons with coexisting medical conditions.
In the past, β-lactam antimicrobial drugs (e.g., penicillin) were widely used to empirically treat community-acquired RTIs. Pneumococcal resistance to penicillin was first observed in the 1960s; since then, the emergence and spread of penicillin-resistant
S. pneumoniae strains have been observed and tracked worldwide. With the β-lactams in widespread use, increasing levels of penicillin-resistant
S. pneumoniae were thought to be of greater potential clinical importance than the emergence of macrolide-resistant
S. pneumoniae strains. However, a number of studies and analyses of patients with pneumococcal pneumonia (
4) have shown no association between penicillin resistance and patient death, although some studies have indicated that penicillin-resistant
S. pneumoniae infection may be associated with an increased risk for suppurative complications, longer hospital stays, and higher treatment costs (
5).
The growing concerns about the emergence and spread of drug-resistant pathogens (including penicillin-resistant
S. pneumoniae) and an increased awareness of infection with atypical pathogens (e.g.,
Chlamydia pneumoniae,
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and
Legionella pneumophila), led to the publication of community-acquired pneumonia treatment guidelines by the American Thoracic Society in 1993 (
6). These guidelines included a recommendation that macrolide drugs be used as first-line empiric therapy for outpatients with community-acquired pneumonia. The macrolides have since been used extensively to treat community-acquired RTIs worldwide. However, increasing macrolide use has also been associated with an increase in pneumococcal resistance to these agents, and macrolide-resistant
S. pneumoniae are now more common than penicillin-resistant
S. pneumoniae in many parts of the world (
7). We provide an overview of pneumococcal resistance to macrolides and assess the impact of macrolide-resistant
S. pneumoniae on the empiric treatment of community-acquired RTIs.