The cough that will not explain itself
A 68-year-old woman has had a nagging cough for two years.
Her chest CT shows small scattered spots. Her sputum finally grows something strange: not tuberculosis, but a cousin called Mycobacterium avium complex.
She had never heard of MAC until last month. Now she faces a year or more of daily antibiotics.
MAC lung disease is a slow-growing mycobacterial lung infection. Mycobacterium avium complex is a close relative of the bacteria that cause tuberculosis, but it behaves differently. It is not contagious from person to person. It lives in soil, water, and shower heads.
It tends to strike people with damaged lungs (from bronchiectasis, old scars, or COPD) and lean older women, for reasons doctors still do not fully understand.
Cases are rising in the United States and Japan. Standard treatment is three oral antibiotics for 12 to 18 months. Many patients cannot tolerate that cocktail, and some never clear the infection.
The old way versus the new approach
The old plan was three oral drugs: a macrolide (usually azithromycin), ethambutol, and often rifampin. Swallow for a year plus. Hope the cultures go negative.
For patients whose infection kept coming back, doctors added an inhaled antibiotic called amikacin liposome inhalation suspension, or ALIS. ALIS uses tiny fat bubbles (liposomes) to carry the antibiotic deep into lung tissue where bacteria hide.
Here is the shift. ALIS was already approved for stubborn, refractory cases. But nobody had tested it on people just getting their diagnosis.
Think of it like fighting a fire in a basement
Pills work like sprinklers on the upper floors. Some water reaches the basement, but most of it soaks everywhere else.
A nebulized drug is a fire hose aimed straight down the stairs. You deliver the medicine exactly where the bugs are hiding, and less of it gets into the rest of the body.
ALIS is the fire hose version. By breathing it in twice a day, patients get high drug levels in the lung and lower levels in the bloodstream, which may mean fewer side effects for the kidneys and ears.
What the ARISE trial tested
ARISE was a 6-month randomized controlled trial. Ninety-nine adults with newly diagnosed noncavitary MAC lung disease (meaning they did not have big holes in their lungs yet) were split into two groups.
Both groups got daily azithromycin and ethambutol. One group also inhaled ALIS. The other inhaled an empty liposome solution as a control.
Researchers tracked culture conversion (when sputum stops growing the bug), quality of life scores, fatigue scores, and side effects.
By month 6, about 81% of the ALIS group had cleared the bug, compared with 64% of the comparator group.
By month 7, one month after stopping treatment, the gap widened. Nearly 79% of the ALIS group stayed clear, versus 47% in the comparator arm. That difference was statistically meaningful.
Patients on ALIS also cleared the infection faster. Among those who converted, 74% had their first negative culture by month 1, compared with 47% in the comparator group.
Quality of life for breathing symptoms kept improving with ALIS through month 7. The comparator group plateaued after month 3.
This does not yet mean ALIS will replace the oral regimen.
It is an add-on, not a swap. And it is expensive, inconvenient, and requires twice-daily nebulizer sessions.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
MAC treatment has barely changed in 20 years. Most guideline updates tweaked dosing, not drugs.
ARISE is one of the first trials to show that front-loading the regimen with an inhaled antibiotic, rather than waiting for standard treatment to fail, may get patients to a cure faster.
The safety signal was reassuring. No ALIS-related serious adverse events or deaths occurred. That matters, because inhaled antibiotics can cause cough, throat irritation, and rarely hearing issues.
If you have been newly diagnosed with MAC lung disease, ask your pulmonologist whether ALIS is appropriate for you. Current guidelines reserve it for refractory cases, but that may shift as ARISE data spreads.
Be realistic about the tradeoffs. ALIS costs tens of thousands of dollars per year in the US. It requires a special nebulizer. Some patients find the inhalation irritating at first.
It is not for everyone, especially patients with cavitary disease (bigger lung damage), who were not included in this trial.
Honest limitations
Ninety-nine patients is a small trial. Larger studies are needed to pin down which subgroups benefit most.
The follow-up was only 7 months. MAC treatment usually runs 12 to 18 months, and relapses often show up later. We do not yet know if early ALIS prevents long-term recurrence.
The trial excluded patients with cavitary disease, the sickest group. Results may not apply to them.
Finally, the study was industry-sponsored (ALIS is made by Insmed). The methods were solid, but independent replication strengthens confidence.
A longer trial called ENCORE is already underway, testing ALIS in newly diagnosed patients over a fuller treatment course. Results will help shape whether guidelines move ALIS to first-line use.
Other inhaled antibiotics are also in earlier development. If the "fire hose to the lungs" approach proves durable, MAC treatment could get shorter, more tolerable, and more effective within the next few years.