Department of Public Health Sciences, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI, USA.
Center for Allergy, Asthma and Immunology Research, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MI, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2018 Jan;42(1):1-7. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2017.205. Epub 2017 Aug 17.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Growing evidence suggests that antibiotic use is associated with childhood body mass index (BMI), potentially via mechanisms mediated by gut microbiome alterations. Less is known on the potential role of prenatal antimicrobial use in offspring obesity risk. We examined whether prenatal antibiotic or antifungal use was associated with BMI at the age of 2 years in 527 birth cohort participants.
METHODS/SUBJECTS: Antimicrobial use was obtained from the prenatal medical record. Height and weight were measured at the age of 2 years. Overweight/obesity was defined as a BMI ⩾85 percentile.
A total of 303 (57.5%) women used antibiotics and 101 (19.2%) used antifungals during pregnancy. Prenatal antifungal use was not associated with child BMI at the age of 2 years. In the fully adjusted model, prenatal antibiotic use was associated with a 0.20±0.10 (P=0.046) higher mean BMI Z-score at the age of 2 years. Associations between prenatal antibiotic use and childhood BMI varied by trimester of exposure, with first or second-trimester exposure more strongly associated with larger BMI at the age of 2 years for both BMI Z-score (interaction P=0.032) and overweight/obesity (interaction P=0.098) after covariate adjustment.
Prenatal antibiotic, but not antifungal, use is associated with larger BMI at the age of 2 years; associations were stronger for antibiotic exposures in earlier trimesters. Future studies examining whether these associations are due to alterations in the maternal and/or infant microbiome are necessary. Children who are overweight at the age of 2 years are at higher risk for being overweight as they age; prenatal antibiotic use is a potentially modifiable exposure that could reduce childhood obesity.
背景/目的:越来越多的证据表明,抗生素的使用与儿童的体重指数(BMI)有关,其潜在机制可能是通过肠道微生物组的改变来介导的。关于产前使用抗生素对后代肥胖风险的潜在作用知之甚少。我们研究了在 527 名出生队列参与者中,产前使用抗生素或抗真菌药是否与 2 岁时的 BMI 相关。
方法/对象:抗生素的使用情况从产前病历中获得。在 2 岁时测量身高和体重。超重/肥胖定义为 BMI ⩾85 百分位。
共有 303 名(57.5%)女性在怀孕期间使用抗生素,101 名(19.2%)使用抗真菌药。产前抗真菌药的使用与儿童 2 岁时的 BMI 无关。在完全调整的模型中,产前抗生素的使用与 2 岁时的平均 BMI Z 评分高 0.20±0.10(P=0.046)有关。在调整协变量后,产前抗生素的使用与儿童 BMI 之间的关联因暴露的孕期 trimester 而异,第一或第二孕期的暴露与 2 岁时的 BMI Z 评分(交互 P=0.032)和超重/肥胖(交互 P=0.098)的关联更强。
产前使用抗生素(而非抗真菌药)与 2 岁时的 BMI 较大有关;在早期孕期的抗生素暴露与更大的 BMI 之间的关联更强。未来需要研究这些关联是否是由于母婴和/或婴儿微生物组的改变所致。2 岁时超重的儿童随着年龄的增长超重的风险更高;产前抗生素的使用是一种潜在的可改变的暴露因素,可降低儿童肥胖的风险。