A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Antibiotics in early life associate with specific gut microbiota signatures in a prospective longitudinal infant cohort




AuthorsKorpela K, Salonen A, Saxen H, Nikkonen A, Peltola V, Jaakkola T, de Vos W, Kolho KL

PublisherNature Publishing Group

Publication year2020

JournalPediatric Research

Journal name in sourcePEDIATRIC RESEARCH

Journal acronymPEDIATR RES

Volume88

Issue3

First page 438

Last page443

Number of pages6

ISSN0031-3998

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41390-020-0761-5

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://helda.helsinki.fi/bitstream/10138/318949/1/Korpela_et_al_Antibiotics_Ped_Res_2020.pdf


Abstract
BACKGROUND The effects of antibiotics on infant gut microbiota are unclear. We hypothesized that the use of common antibiotics results in long-term aberration in gut microbiota. METHODS Antibiotic-naive infants were prospectively recruited when hospitalized because of a respiratory syncytial virus infection. Composition of fecal microbiota was compared between those receiving antibiotics during follow-up (prescribed at clinicians' discretion because of complications such as otitis media) and those with no antibiotic exposure. Fecal sampling started on day 1, then continued at 2-day intervals during the hospital stay, and at 1, 3 and 6 months at home. RESULTS One hundred and sixty-three fecal samples from 40 patients (median age 2.3 months at baseline; 22 exposed to antibiotics) were available for microbiota analyses. A single course of amoxicillin or macrolide resulted in aberration of infant microbiota characterized by variation in the abundance of bifidobacteria, enterobacteria and clostridia, lasting for several months. Recovery from the antibiotics was associated with an increase in clostridia. Occasionally, antibiotic use resulted in microbiota profiles associated with inflammatory conditions. CONCLUSIONS Antibiotic use in infants modifies especially bifidobacterial levels. Further studies are warranted whether administration of bifidobacteria will provide health benefits by normalizing the microbiota in infants receiving antibiotics.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 20:10