School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; British Columbia Centre for Disease Control, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; Department of Pediatrics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; British Columbia Children's Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Lancet Respir Med. 2020 Nov;8(11):1094-1105. doi: 10.1016/S2213-2600(20)30052-7. Epub 2020 Mar 24.
Childhood asthma incidence is decreasing in some parts of Europe and North America. Antibiotic use in infancy has been associated with increased asthma risk. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that decreases in asthma incidence are linked to reduced antibiotic prescribing and mediated by changes in the gut bacterial community.
This study comprised population-based and prospective cohort analyses. At the population level, we used administrative data from British Columbia, Canada (population 4·7 million), on annual rates of antibiotic prescriptions and asthma diagnoses, to assess the association between antibiotic prescribing (at age <1 year) and asthma incidence (at age 1-4 years). At the individual level, 2644 children from the Canadian Healthy Infant Longitudinal Development (CHILD) prospective birth cohort were examined for the association of systemic antibiotic use (at age <1 year) with the diagnosis of asthma (at age 5 years). In the same cohort, we did a mechanistic investigation of 917 children with available 16S rRNA gene sequencing data from faecal samples (at age ≤1 year), to assess how composition of the gut microbiota relates to antibiotic exposure and asthma incidence.
At the population level between 2000 and 2014, asthma incidence in children (aged 1-4 years) showed an absolute decrease of 7·1 new diagnoses per 1000 children, from 27·3 (26·8-28·3) per 1000 children to 20·2 (19·5-20·8) per 1000 children (a relative decrease of 26·0%). Reduction in incidence over the study period was associated with decreasing antibiotic use in infancy (age <1 year), from 1253·8 prescriptions (95% CI 1219·3-1288·9) per 1000 infants to 489·1 (467·6-511·2) per 1000 infants (Spearman's r=0·81; p<0·0001). Asthma incidence increased by 24% with each 10% increase in antibiotic prescribing (adjusted incidence rate ratio 1·24 [95% CI 1·20-1·28]; p<0·0001). In the CHILD cohort, after excluding children who received antibiotics for respiratory symptoms, asthma diagnosis in childhood was associated with infant antibiotic use (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2·15 [95% CI 1·37-3·39]; p=0·0009), with a significant dose-response; 114 (5·2%) of 2182 children unexposed to antibiotics had asthma by age 5 years, compared with 23 (8·1%) of 284 exposed to one course, five (10·2%) of 49 exposed to two courses, and six (17·6%) of 34 exposed to three or more courses (aOR 1·44 [1·16-1·79]; p=0·0008). Increasing α-diversity of the gut microbiota, defined as an IQR increase (25th to 75th percentile) in the Chao1 index, at age 1 year was associated with a 32% reduced risk of asthma at age 5 years (aOR for IQR increase 0·68 [0·46-0·99]; p=0·046). In a structural equation model, we found the gut microbiota at age 1 year, characterised by α-diversity, β-diversity, and amplicon sequence variants modified by antibiotic exposure, to be a significant mediator between outpatient antibiotic exposure in the first year of life and asthma diagnosis at age 5 years (β=0·08; p=0·027).
Our findings suggest that the reduction in the incidence of paediatric asthma observed in recent years might be an unexpected benefit of prudent antibiotic use during infancy, acting via preservation of the gut microbial community.
British Columbia Ministry of Health, Pharmaceutical Services Branch; Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Allergy, Genes and Environment (AllerGen) Network of Centres of Excellence; Genome Canada; and Genome British Columbia.
在一些欧洲和北美的地区,儿童哮喘的发病率正在下降。婴儿时期使用抗生素与哮喘风险增加有关。在本研究中,我们检验了这样一个假设,即哮喘发病率的下降与抗生素处方的减少有关,而这种减少是通过肠道细菌群落的变化来介导的。
本研究包括基于人群的和前瞻性队列分析。在人群层面,我们使用了来自加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省(人口 470 万)的行政数据,包括年度抗生素处方率和哮喘诊断率,以评估婴儿期(<1 岁)抗生素处方与 1-4 岁儿童哮喘发病率之间的关联。在个体层面,对加拿大健康婴儿纵向发展(CHILD)前瞻性出生队列的 2644 名儿童进行了研究,以评估婴儿期(<1 岁)全身使用抗生素与 5 岁时哮喘诊断之间的关联。在同一队列中,我们对 917 名有粪便样本 16S rRNA 基因测序数据的儿童进行了机制研究,以评估肠道微生物组的组成如何与抗生素暴露和哮喘发病率相关。
在 2000 年至 2014 年期间,儿童(1-4 岁)哮喘发病率绝对下降了 7.1 例/每 1000 名儿童,从 27.3 例/每 1000 名儿童下降至 20.2 例/每 1000 名儿童(相对下降 26.0%)。研究期间发病率的下降与婴儿期(<1 岁)抗生素使用的减少有关,从 1253.8 次处方(95%CI 1219.3-1288.9)/每 1000 名婴儿下降至 489.1 次(467.6-511.2)/每 1000 名婴儿(Spearman's r=0.81;p<0.0001)。抗生素使用量每增加 10%,哮喘发病率就会增加 24%(调整后的发病率比值比 1.24 [95%CI 1.20-1.28];p<0.0001)。在 CHILD 队列中,排除因呼吸道症状而接受抗生素治疗的儿童后,儿童时期的哮喘诊断与婴儿期抗生素使用有关(调整后的优势比 [aOR] 2.15 [95%CI 1.37-3.39];p=0.0009),且存在显著的剂量反应;2182 名未暴露于抗生素的儿童中,有 114 名(5.2%)在 5 岁时被诊断为哮喘,而 284 名接受一个疗程的儿童中有 23 名(8.1%),49 名接受两个疗程的儿童中有 5 名(10.2%),34 名接受三个或更多疗程的儿童中有 6 名(17.6%)(aOR 1.44 [1.16-1.79];p=0.0008)。肠道微生物组在 1 岁时的 α-多样性增加(25 至 75 分位数的 Chao1 指数增加),与 5 岁时哮喘的风险降低 32%相关(IQR 增加的优势比为 0.68 [0.46-0.99];p=0.046)。在结构方程模型中,我们发现 1 岁时的肠道微生物组,其特征是 α-多样性、β-多样性和由抗生素暴露修饰的扩增子序列变体,是婴儿期门诊抗生素暴露与 5 岁时哮喘诊断之间的一个重要中介(β=0.08;p=0.027)。
我们的研究结果表明,近年来观察到的儿童哮喘发病率下降可能是婴儿期谨慎使用抗生素的意外益处,其作用是通过保护肠道微生物群落来实现的。
不列颠哥伦比亚省卫生部、药品服务处;加拿大卫生研究院;过敏、基因和环境(AllerGen)网络卓越中心;加拿大基因组和不列颠哥伦比亚基因组。