Drug Monograph

Azithromycin

azithromycin dihydrate — marketed as Zithromax (Z-Pak, Tri-Pak)

Macrolide (azalide) antibacterial·Oral, IV
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Terminal Half-Life
~68 h (tissue); initial serum t½ 11–14 h
Metabolism
Hepatic (demethylation); biliary excretion major route; ~6% unchanged in urine
Protein Binding
Concentration-dependent: 51% at low conc. to 7% at high conc.
Bioavailability
~37% (oral)
Volume of Distribution
~23–31 L/kg (very large; tissue:serum ratio up to 100:1)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
Macrolide (azalide subclass)
Available Doses
250, 500 mg tablets; 100, 200 mg/5 mL suspension; 1 g single-dose packet; IV 500 mg
Route
Oral, Intravenous
Renal Adjustment
Not required (minimal renal excretion)
Hepatic Adjustment
PK not established in hepatic impairment; use with caution
Pregnancy
No adequate controlled studies; use if clearly needed
Lactation
Present in breast milk; monitor infant for diarrhea, vomiting, rash
Schedule
Not controlled; Rx only
Generic Available
Yes (widely available)
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
Community-acquired pneumonia (mild, oral-appropriate)Adults; children ≥6 monthsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Acute bacterial sinusitisAdults; children ≥6 monthsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Acute otitis mediaChildren ≥6 monthsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Acute bacterial exacerbation of chronic bronchitisAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Pharyngitis / tonsillitis (second-line)Adults; children ≥2 yearsAlternative to first-lineFDA Approved
Uncomplicated skin and skin structure infectionsAdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Urethritis and cervicitis (chlamydial, gonococcal)AdultsMonotherapyFDA Approved
Genital ulcer disease (chancroid)Adult menMonotherapyFDA Approved

Azithromycin covers atypical pathogens (Mycoplasma, Chlamydophila, Legionella) that beta-lactams miss, making it a key agent for community-acquired pneumonia. For pharyngitis, it is explicitly a second-line option — penicillin or amoxicillin remains first-line per IDSA guidelines. Azithromycin should not be used for pneumonia in patients judged inappropriate for oral therapy due to moderate-to-severe illness or significant risk factors.

Off-Label Uses

Traveler’s diarrhea — 1 g single dose or 500 mg daily for 3 days; preferred in South/Southeast Asia where fluoroquinolone resistance is high. Evidence quality: High.

Pertussis (whooping cough) — treatment and post-exposure prophylaxis — CDC recommends azithromycin as first-line: adults 500 mg Day 1 then 250 mg Days 2–5; infants <6 months 10 mg/kg/day for 5 days. Evidence quality: High.

Mycobacterium avium complex (MAC) prophylaxis in HIV — 1200 mg once weekly; FDA-approved for the IV/600 mg tablet formulation but commonly used off-label with standard tablets. Evidence quality: High.

Non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) — M. avium complex lung disease — ATS/IDSA 2020 guidelines recommend azithromycin-based regimens as first-line. Evidence quality: High.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Community-acquired pneumonia (mild, outpatient)500 mg Day 1250 mg once daily Days 2–51.5 g total course5-day Z-Pak regimen; covers atypicals (Mycoplasma, Chlamydophila)
FDA PI §2.1
Acute bacterial sinusitis500 mg once dailySame for 3 days1.5 g total course3-day course; Tri-Pak
FDA PI §2.1
ABECB (mild-moderate)500 mg Day 1250 mg Days 2–5 OR 500 mg daily for 3 days1.5 g total courseEither 5-day or 3-day regimen acceptable
FDA PI §2.1
Pharyngitis / tonsillitis (second-line)500 mg Day 1250 mg Days 2–51.5 g total courseSecond-line only — penicillin/amoxicillin is first-line
FDA PI §2.1; IDSA 2012
Uncomplicated skin/soft tissue infection500 mg Day 1250 mg Days 2–51.5 g total course5-day course
FDA PI §2.1
Chlamydial urethritis / cervicitis1 g single doseSingle dose1 gSingle-dose directly observed therapy possible; test for syphilis at diagnosis
FDA PI §2.1; CDC 2021 STI guidelines
Gonococcal urethritis / cervicitis2 g single doseSingle dose2 gHigher GI side effects at this dose (nausea 18%, diarrhea 14%)
FDA PI §2.1
Chancroid (genital ulcer disease)1 g single doseSingle dose1 gEfficacy not established in women
FDA PI §2.1
Pertussis — treatment/prophylaxis (off-label)500 mg Day 1250 mg Days 2–51.5 g totalCDC first-line for pertussis treatment and post-exposure prophylaxis
CDC pertussis guidelines

Pediatric Dosing

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Acute otitis media (≥6 months) — 5-day regimen10 mg/kg Day 15 mg/kg/day Days 2–530 mg/kg total courseTotal dose 30 mg/kg over 5 days
FDA PI §2.2
Acute otitis media (≥6 months) — 3-day regimen10 mg/kg/day for 3 daysSame30 mg/kg total courseTotal dose 30 mg/kg over 3 days
FDA PI §2.2
Acute otitis media (≥6 months) — single-dose30 mg/kg single doseSingle dose30 mg/kgHighest diarrhea rate (4.3%) of the three AOM regimens
FDA PI §2.2
Acute bacterial sinusitis (≥6 months)10 mg/kg/day for 3 daysSame500 mg/day3-day course
FDA PI §2.2
Community-acquired pneumonia (≥6 months)10 mg/kg Day 15 mg/kg Days 2–5500 mg Day 1, 250 mg Days 2–55-day regimen only (3-day and 1-day not established for CAP)
FDA PI §2.2
Pharyngitis / tonsillitis (≥2 years)12 mg/kg/day for 5 daysSame500 mg/daySecond-line only; higher daily dose than other indications
FDA PI §2.2
Clinical Pearl: Why Short Courses Work

Azithromycin’s uniquely long terminal half-life (~68 hours) and extraordinary tissue accumulation (tissue:serum ratios up to 100:1) mean that a 5-day oral course maintains therapeutic tissue concentrations for 7–10 days after the last dose. This is the pharmacokinetic basis for the short treatment courses and the effectiveness of single-dose regimens for STIs. The drug is concentrated within phagocytes and delivered directly to sites of infection, which is why low serum levels do not reflect its clinical efficacy. The PK/PD driver for azithromycin is AUC/MIC ratio, not time above MIC.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Azithromycin is an azalide — a subclass of macrolide antibacterials created by inserting a nitrogen atom into the lactone ring of erythromycin, producing a 15-membered ring structure. It binds to the 50S ribosomal subunit of susceptible bacteria, specifically at domain V of the 23S rRNA within the peptide exit tunnel (PET). This binding physically obstructs the tunnel through which the growing polypeptide chain must pass, inhibiting bacterial protein synthesis. Azithromycin is considered bacteriostatic at standard therapeutic concentrations, though bactericidal activity has been observed at higher concentrations against particularly susceptible organisms. Its spectrum includes gram-positive organisms (S. pneumoniae, S. pyogenes, S. aureus), gram-negatives (H. influenzae, M. catarrhalis), and critically, atypical pathogens (Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydophila pneumoniae, Legionella).

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionOral bioavailability ~37% (capsules ~38%); Tmax 2–3 h; food increases Cmax by ~23% (tablets) with no change in AUC; antacids reduce Cmax by ~24%Can be taken with or without food (tablets); avoid simultaneous administration with aluminum/magnesium antacids; low oral bioavailability offset by extraordinary tissue accumulation
DistributionVd ~23–31 L/kg (extremely large); tissue:serum ratio up to 100:1; concentrated in phagocytes (WBCs transport drug to infection sites); protein binding concentration-dependent: 51% at 0.02 mcg/mL, 7% at 2 mcg/mLLow serum levels are misleading — tissue and intracellular concentrations far exceed MICs; high Vd enables short-course therapy; good penetration to lungs, tonsils, prostate, middle ear; poor CNS penetration
MetabolismHepatic demethylation (CYP3A4) to inactive metabolites; minimal CYP3A4 inhibition (unlike erythromycin/clarithromycin)Far fewer CYP-mediated drug interactions than erythromycin or clarithromycin; PK in hepatic impairment not established — use with caution
EliminationTerminal t½ ~68 h (tissue); initial serum t½ 11–14 h; primarily biliary/fecal excretion (~50% in feces); ~6% excreted unchanged in urine (oral); no dose adjustment for renal impairmentProlonged tissue half-life supports short courses (5-day course provides 7–10 days of therapeutic tissue levels); no renal dose adjustment needed; not removed by dialysis
SE

Side Effects

Side effect rates vary significantly by regimen. The 2 g single dose causes markedly more GI effects than the 5-day multi-dose regimen.

1–10%Common (Multi-Dose 5-Day Regimen — Adults)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Diarrhea / loose stools4–5% (up to 7% with 1 g dose; 14% with 2 g dose)Most common effect; dose-related; usually self-limiting; evaluate for C. difficile if severe/bloody
Nausea3% (5% with 1 g; 18% with 2 g dose)Significantly worse with 2 g single dose; taking with food improves tolerability
Abdominal pain2–3% (5% with 1 g; 7% with 2 g dose)Dose-related; usually resolves after course completion
Vomiting<1% multi-dose (2% with 1 g; 7% with 2 g dose)Significant concern with single 2 g dose; vomiting within 30 min may require re-dosing
SeriousSerious Adverse Effects
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
QT prolongation / torsades de pointesRare; dose- and concentration-dependentDuring treatment; risk greatest during first 5 daysAvoid in patients with known QT prolongation, uncorrected hypokalemia/hypomagnesemia, bradyarrhythmias, or concurrent Class IA/III antiarrhythmics; ECG if risk factors present
Cardiovascular death~2-fold increased short-term risk vs amoxicillin (observational data); 20–400 per million coursesFirst 5 days of useWeigh risk vs benefit; greatest concern in patients with pre-existing cardiovascular disease; FDA PI §5.5 warning added 11/2021
Hepatotoxicity (hepatitis, cholestatic jaundice, hepatic necrosis/failure)Rare; some fatalDuring or after treatment; allergic symptoms may recur due to long tissue t½Discontinue immediately if signs of hepatitis; monitor LFTs; prior azithromycin hepatotoxicity is a contraindication
Anaphylaxis / SJS / TEN / DRESS / AGEPRare; fatalities reportedDuring or after treatment; may recur after stopping due to long tissue t½Discontinue; appropriate therapy; allergic symptoms may recur when symptomatic treatment stopped — prolonged observation needed
Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (IHPS)Rare; neonates (≤42 days of life)Days to weeks after neonatal exposureMonitor for projectile vomiting, irritability with feeding; surgical consultation if suspected
C. difficile-associated diarrheaUncommonDuring or up to 2 months after treatmentStop azithromycin; test for C. difficile; treat if confirmed
Hearing impairmentRare; 5.6% in HIV-infected children on prolonged high-dose therapyVariable; reported with prolonged coursesUsually reversible; audiometric monitoring for prolonged courses (e.g., MAC prophylaxis)
Myasthenia gravis exacerbationRareVariableAvoid in myasthenia gravis if possible; new-onset myasthenic syndrome also reported
DiscontinuationDiscontinuation Rates
Multi-Dose 5-Day (Adults)
~0.7%
Extremely well tolerated. Most discontinuations were GI-related (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain).
3-Day Regimen (Adults)
~0.6%
Even lower discontinuation than 5-day regimen. Pediatric discontinuation rate approximately 1%.
Cardiovascular Death Warning (FDA PI §5.5, added 11/2021)

Observational studies have shown an approximately two-fold increased short-term risk of acute cardiovascular death in adults taking azithromycin compared with amoxicillin. The five-day cardiovascular mortality ranged from 20 to 400 per million treatment courses. This risk was greatest during the first five days and does not appear limited to patients with pre-existing cardiovascular disease. The FDA advises clinicians to balance this potential risk with treatment benefits. This risk is not shared with amoxicillin, and azithromycin should be used judiciously in patients with significant cardiovascular risk factors.

Int

Drug Interactions

Azithromycin has a substantially more favorable drug interaction profile than erythromycin or clarithromycin because it has minimal CYP3A4 inhibitory activity. The primary interaction concerns are QT prolongation (pharmacodynamic) and P-glycoprotein inhibition.

MajorQT-prolonging drugs (Class IA/III antiarrhythmics, fluoroquinolones, antipsychotics)
MechanismAdditive QT interval prolongation
EffectIncreased risk of torsades de pointes; risk is dose-dependent and concentration-dependent
ManagementAvoid combination if possible; if co-administration required, obtain baseline ECG, correct hypokalemia/hypomagnesemia, monitor QTc
FDA PI §5.4
MajorNelfinavir
MechanismNelfinavir increases azithromycin serum concentrations
EffectElevated azithromycin levels with increased risk of liver enzyme abnormalities and hearing impairment
ManagementNo dose adjustment recommended, but close monitoring for azithromycin adverse effects warranted
FDA PI §7.1
ModerateWarfarin
MechanismPossible alteration of warfarin metabolism or gut flora effects
EffectIncreased PT/INR; bleeding risk
ManagementMonitor prothrombin time closely during and after azithromycin course
FDA PI §7.2
ModerateDigoxin
MechanismAzithromycin may inhibit P-glycoprotein and alter gut flora that metabolize digoxin
EffectElevated digoxin levels; risk of digoxin toxicity
ManagementMonitor digoxin levels during and after azithromycin course; watch for signs of toxicity (nausea, visual changes, arrhythmias)
Postmarketing / Lexicomp
ModerateColchicine
MechanismP-glycoprotein inhibition by azithromycin
EffectIncreased colchicine levels with risk of fatal colchicine toxicity
ManagementAvoid combination if possible; contraindicated if renal or hepatic impairment; reduce colchicine dose if co-administration necessary
Colchicine PI / Lexicomp
MinorAluminum/magnesium antacids
MechanismReduced azithromycin absorption (Cmax reduced ~24%)
EffectDecreased peak concentrations; AUC unaffected
ManagementDo not take simultaneously; separate by at least 2 hours
FDA PI §12.3
CYP Interaction Advantage Over Other Macrolides

Unlike erythromycin and clarithromycin (which are potent CYP3A4 inhibitors), azithromycin has minimal CYP3A4 inhibitory activity. This means azithromycin does not significantly interact with statins, cyclosporine, carbamazepine, or theophylline — a major clinical advantage for patients on complex medication regimens. However, azithromycin does retain P-glycoprotein inhibitory activity, which is relevant for digoxin and colchicine interactions.

Mon

Monitoring

  • Clinical response48–72 h after initiation
    Routine
    Assess symptom improvement. Remember that tissue drug levels persist 7–10 days after the last dose, so the full clinical effect may not be apparent until several days after course completion.
  • ECG / QTcBaseline in at-risk patients
    Trigger-based
    Obtain ECG before prescribing if patient has known QT prolongation, congenital long QT syndrome, bradyarrhythmias, uncompensated heart failure, concurrent QT-prolonging drugs, or uncorrected hypokalemia/hypomagnesemia. Elderly patients are more susceptible to QT effects.
  • Hepatic functionIf signs of hepatitis develop
    Trigger-based
    Monitor LFTs if patient develops jaundice, dark urine, abdominal pain, or unexplained fatigue. Discontinue immediately if hepatitis suspected. Note that allergic symptoms may recur after stopping azithromycin due to its long tissue half-life.
  • INR (with warfarin)During and after course
    Trigger-based
    Monitor prothrombin time if patient is on warfarin. Effects may persist after azithromycin course due to long tissue half-life.
  • HearingFor prolonged courses only
    Trigger-based
    Audiometric monitoring recommended for prolonged high-dose use (e.g., MAC prophylaxis/treatment). Hearing impairment reported in 5.6% of HIV-infected children on long-term therapy; usually reversible.
  • GI / C. difficileThroughout and up to 2 months after
    Routine
    Evaluate new persistent or bloody diarrhea for C. difficile. CDAD can present during or up to 2 months after treatment.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Known hypersensitivity to azithromycin, erythromycin, any macrolide, or any ketolide drug (FDA PI §4.1).
  • History of cholestatic jaundice or hepatic dysfunction associated with prior azithromycin use (FDA PI §4.2).

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Known QT prolongation or congenital long QT syndrome — risk of torsades de pointes.
  • Concurrent use of Class IA or Class III antiarrhythmic drugs — additive QT prolongation.
  • Myasthenia gravis — may exacerbate weakness or precipitate new-onset myasthenic syndrome.

Use with Caution

  • Hepatic impairment — PK not established; azithromycin is hepatically metabolized and eliminated primarily via biliary excretion.
  • Significant cardiovascular disease — observational data suggest increased short-term cardiovascular mortality risk.
  • Uncorrected hypokalemia or hypomagnesemia — increases QT prolongation risk.
  • Elderly patients — may be more susceptible to QT interval effects and torsades de pointes.
  • Neonates (≤42 days of life) — risk of IHPS; monitor for vomiting/irritability with feeding.
FDA Safety Warning QT Prolongation, Cardiovascular Death, and Hepatotoxicity

Prolonged cardiac repolarization and QT interval, imparting a risk of cardiac arrhythmia and torsades de pointes, have been seen with azithromycin. Observational studies have shown an approximately two-fold increased short-term risk of cardiovascular death compared with amoxicillin (20–400 per million courses). Severe and sometimes fatal hepatotoxicity has been reported, including hepatic necrosis and hepatic failure. Due to azithromycin’s long tissue half-life, allergic and hepatic reactions may recur after the drug is stopped, requiring prolonged observation.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Azithromycin is an antibiotic used to treat bacterial infections including pneumonia, sinusitis, bronchitis, ear infections, skin infections, and certain sexually transmitted infections. It does not work against viral infections like the common cold or flu.

How to Take

Tablets can be taken with or without food. Do not take aluminum- or magnesium-containing antacids at the same time as azithromycin — separate by at least 2 hours. Complete the full course as prescribed even if you feel better before finishing. If using the liquid suspension, shake well and measure with the dosing device provided.

Stomach Upset
Tell patientNausea, diarrhea, and stomach pain are the most common side effects. These are usually mild and improve after the course is finished. Taking the medication with food may help reduce stomach upset.
Call prescriberContact your prescriber if diarrhea is severe, watery or bloody, or if accompanied by fever and stomach cramps — even if it occurs up to 2 months after finishing the antibiotic.
Heart Rhythm
Tell patientIn rare cases, azithromycin can affect heart rhythm. This risk is higher if you have heart disease, take other medications that affect heart rhythm, or have low potassium or magnesium levels.
Call prescriberSeek immediate medical attention if you experience a fast or irregular heartbeat, fainting, or dizziness during treatment.
Liver Warning Signs
Tell patientRarely, azithromycin can affect the liver. Because the drug stays in your body for several days after the last dose, liver problems can appear even after you finish taking it.
Call prescriberSeek medical attention if you notice yellowing of the skin or eyes, dark urine, unusual fatigue, or severe abdominal pain — even if these occur days after completing the course.
Allergic Reactions
Tell patientStop azithromycin and seek immediate medical attention if you develop signs of an allergic reaction such as hives, swelling, difficulty breathing, or severe skin rash. Allergic symptoms can recur even after the medication is stopped because the drug remains in tissues for an extended period.
Call prescriberIf any allergic symptoms return after initially improving, seek medical attention immediately — even if you are no longer taking the medication.
STI-Specific Counselling
Tell patientIf prescribed for chlamydia or gonorrhea, avoid sexual contact until treatment is complete and symptoms have resolved. Partners should also be tested and treated. Azithromycin does not treat syphilis — your prescriber may order additional testing.
Call prescriberIf symptoms do not resolve within 7 days of completing treatment, or if new symptoms develop.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. ZITHROMAX (azithromycin) prescribing information. Pfizer Inc. Revised November 2021. FDA Label (PDF)Primary source for all dosing, indications, adverse reactions (diarrhea 4–14%, nausea 3–18% by regimen), QT/CV death warnings, contraindications, and PK data.
  2. Azithromycin. StatPearls [Internet]. Updated November 2024. NCBI BookshelfComprehensive review of azithromycin pharmacology, PK, indications, and contraindications including IHPS and myasthenia gravis warnings.
Key Clinical Trials / Systematic Reviews
  1. Ray WA, Murray KT, Hall K, Arbogast PG, Stein CM. Azithromycin and the risk of cardiovascular death. N Engl J Med. 2012;366(20):1881-1890. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1003833Landmark Tennessee Medicaid cohort study showing ~2.5-fold increased risk of cardiovascular death during 5-day azithromycin courses vs amoxicillin; basis for FDA CV death warning.
  2. Svanstrom H, Pasternak B, Hviid A. Use of azithromycin and death from cardiovascular causes. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(18):1704-1712. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1300799Danish nationwide cohort study finding increased rate of cardiovascular death with azithromycin vs penicillin V, supporting the CV risk signal.
  3. Shulman ST, Bisno AL, Clegg HW, et al. Clinical practice guideline for the diagnosis and management of group A streptococcal pharyngitis: 2012 update by the IDSA. Clin Infect Dis. 2012;55(10):e86-e102. doi:10.1093/cid/cis629IDSA guideline positioning azithromycin as second-line for GAS pharyngitis (only for penicillin-allergic patients); penicillin/amoxicillin remains first-line.
Guidelines
  1. Metlay JP, Waterer GW, Long AC, et al. Diagnosis and treatment of adults with community-acquired pneumonia: an official clinical practice guideline of the ATS and IDSA. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2019;200(7):e45-e67. doi:10.1164/rccm.201908-1581STATS/IDSA 2019 CAP guideline: azithromycin monotherapy for outpatient CAP without comorbidities; with beta-lactam for patients with comorbidities.
  2. Workowski KA, Bachmann LH, Chan PA, et al. Sexually transmitted infections treatment guidelines, 2021. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2021;70(4):1-187. doi:10.15585/mmwr.rr7004a1CDC 2021 STI guidelines: azithromycin 1 g single dose for chlamydial infections; now second-line to doxycycline for chlamydia based on updated evidence.
  3. Tiwari T, Murphy TV, Moran J; National Immunization Program, CDC. Recommended antimicrobial agents for the treatment and postexposure prophylaxis of pertussis. MMWR Recomm Rep. 2005;54(RR-14):1-16. CDCCDC pertussis guideline recommending azithromycin as first-line for treatment and post-exposure prophylaxis across all age groups.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Retsema J, Girard A, Schelkly W, et al. Spectrum and mode of action of azithromycin (CP-62,993), a new 15-membered-ring macrolide with improved potency against gram-negative organisms. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 1987;31(12):1939-1947. doi:10.1128/AAC.31.12.1939Original characterization of azithromycin’s spectrum and mode of action as a novel 15-membered azalide macrolide.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Foulds G, Shepard RM, Johnson RB. The pharmacokinetics of azithromycin in human serum and tissues. J Antimicrob Chemother. 1990;25(Suppl A):73-82. doi:10.1093/jac/25.suppl_A.73Key PK study establishing azithromycin’s ~37% bioavailability, extensive tissue accumulation (tissue:serum up to 100:1), and tissue half-lives of 2–3 days.
  2. Drew RH, Gallis HA. Azithromycin — spectrum of activity, pharmacokinetics, and clinical applications. Pharmacotherapy. 1992;12(3):161-173. doi:10.1002/j.1875-9114.1992.tb04504.xComprehensive early review of azithromycin PK including Vd ~23 L/kg, terminal t½ up to 5 days, and hepatic/biliary elimination pathway.
  3. Parnham MJ, Erakovic Haber V, Giamarellos-Bourboulis EJ, Perletti G, Verleden GM, Vos R. Azithromycin: mechanisms of action and their relevance for clinical applications. Pharmacol Ther. 2014;143(2):225-245. doi:10.1016/j.pharmthera.2014.03.003Review of azithromycin’s anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory properties beyond its antibacterial activity, relevant to its use in NTM and COPD.