Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States of America.
Quantitative Sciences Unit, Department of Medicine, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 28;13(6):e0199298. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199298. eCollection 2018.
Triclosan and triclocarban (TCs) are broad-spectrum antimicrobials that, until recently, were found in a wide variety of household and personal wash products. Popular with consumers, TCs have not been shown to protect against infectious diseases.
To determine whether use of TC-containing wash products reduces incidence of infection in children less than one year of age.
Starting in 2011, we nested a randomized intervention of wash products with and without TCs within a multiethnic birth cohort. Maternal reports of infectious disease symptoms and antibiotic use were collected weekly by automated survey; household visits occurred every four months. Antibiotic prescriptions were identified by medical chart review. Urinary triclosan levels were measured in a participant subset. Differences by intervention group in reported infectious disease (primary outcome) and antibiotic use (secondary outcome) were assessed using mixed effects logistic regression and Fisher's Exact tests, respectively.
Infectious illness occurred in 6% of weeks, with upper respiratory illness the predominant syndrome. Among 60 (45%) TC-exposed and 73 (55%) non-TC-exposed babies, infectious disease reports did not differ in frequency between groups (likelihood ratio test: p = 0.88). Medical visits with antibiotic prescriptions were less common in the TC group than in the non-TC group (7.8% vs. 16.6%, respectively; p = 0.02).
Although randomization to TC-containing wash products was not associated with decreased infectious disease reports by mothers, TCs were associated with decreased antibiotic prescriptions, suggesting a benefit against bacterial infection. The recent removal of TCs from consumer wash products makes further elucidation of benefits and risks impracticable.
三氯生和三氯卡班(TCs)是广谱抗菌剂,直到最近,它们还广泛存在于各种家用和个人洗护产品中。由于受到消费者的欢迎,TCs 并不能预防传染病。
确定使用含 TCs 的洗护产品是否能降低一岁以下儿童感染的发生率。
从 2011 年开始,我们在一个多民族的出生队列中,将含 TCs 和不含 TCs 的洗护产品随机干预嵌套在一起。通过自动调查每周收集母亲报告的传染病症状和抗生素使用情况;每四个月进行一次家访。通过医疗记录审查确定抗生素处方。在参与者的子集中测量尿中的三氯生水平。使用混合效应逻辑回归和 Fisher 精确检验分别评估干预组之间报告的传染病(主要结局)和抗生素使用(次要结局)的差异。
6%的周出现了传染病,上呼吸道疾病是主要综合征。在 60 名(45%)TC 暴露婴儿和 73 名(55%)非 TC 暴露婴儿中,两组之间疾病报告的频率没有差异(似然比检验:p=0.88)。TC 组接受带抗生素处方的医疗访问的次数少于非 TC 组(分别为 7.8%和 16.6%;p=0.02)。
尽管随机分配到含 TCs 的洗护产品与母亲报告的传染病减少无关,但 TCs 与抗生素处方减少有关,这表明对细菌感染有好处。最近已将 TCs 从消费者洗护产品中去除,进一步阐明其益处和风险变得不切实际。