Acute exacerbations of
chronic bronchitis are one of the major public health challenges. New data suggest that they will remain so for many years. Although the role of bacteria in the initiation and maintenance of bronchial
inflammation, both during and between exacerbations, is well recognized, studies of the long-term effects of
therapy are few and inadequate, and the nature of the relationship with
disease progression is largely unknown. Data are beginning to emerge that firmly link bacterial
inflammation and progressive disease with physiological and functional disability. Methods are being developed to provide integrated, uncomplicated and reproducible assessments of health-related quality of life. These may prove fundamental to the proper investigation of new treatment modalities. Among the newer
antibacterial agents,
fluoroquinolones have received most investigative attention, regrettably usually without providing clinical confirmation of their obvious superiority in vitro and of their pharmacokinetic and related pharmacodynamic properties. New trial designs need to address an integrated outcome analysis, with the assessment of long-term benefit and pharmaco-economic monitoring. More
antibacterial agents are available at the millennium than ever before. After 50 years, it would be preferable if we knew a little more about their role in this complex disease.