Department of Microbiology, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Human Microbiome Research Program, Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2022 Feb 9;115(2):407-421. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/nqab353.
Infants are at a high risk of acquiring fatal infections, and their treatment relies on functioning antibiotics. Antibiotic resistance genes (ARGs) are present in high numbers in antibiotic-naive infants' gut microbiomes, and infant mortality caused by resistant infections is high. The role of antibiotics in shaping the infant resistome has been studied, but there is limited knowledge on other factors that affect the antibiotic resistance burden of the infant gut.
Our objectives were to determine the impact of early exposure to formula on the ARG load in neonates and infants born either preterm or full term. Our hypotheses were that diet causes a selective pressure that influences the microbial community of the infant gut, and formula exposure would increase the abundance of taxa that carry ARGs.
Cross-sectionally sampled gut metagenomes of 46 neonates were used to build a generalized linear model to determine the impact of diet on ARG loads in neonates. The model was cross-validated using neonate metagenomes gathered from public databases using our custom statistical pipeline for cross-validation.
Formula-fed neonates had higher relative abundances of opportunistic pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus, Staphylococcus epidermidis, Klebsiella pneumoniae, Klebsiella oxytoca, and Clostridioides difficile. The relative abundance of ARGs carried by gut bacteria was 69% higher in the formula-receiving group (fold change, 1.69; 95% CI: 1.12-2.55; P = 0.013; n = 180) compared to exclusively human milk-fed infants. The formula-fed infants also had significantly less typical infant bacteria, such as Bifidobacteria, that have potential health benefits.
The novel finding that formula exposure is correlated with a higher neonatal ARG burden lays the foundation that clinicians should consider feeding mode in addition to antibiotic use during the first months of life to minimize the proliferation of antibiotic-resistant gut bacteria in infants.
婴儿极易感染致命性感染,而他们的治疗依赖于有效的抗生素。抗生素耐药基因(ARGs)在抗生素未使用婴儿的肠道微生物组中大量存在,且由耐药感染引起的婴儿死亡率很高。抗生素在塑造婴儿耐药组方面的作用已得到研究,但对于影响婴儿肠道抗生素耐药负担的其他因素知之甚少。
我们的目的是确定早期接触配方奶对早产儿和足月儿新生儿和婴儿 ARG 负荷的影响。我们的假设是,饮食会产生选择性压力,影响婴儿肠道的微生物群落,而配方奶的摄入会增加携带 ARGs 的菌群丰度。
使用 46 名新生儿的横截面样本肠道宏基因组来构建广义线性模型,以确定饮食对新生儿 ARG 负荷的影响。该模型使用我们的自定义交叉验证统计管道从公共数据库中收集的新生儿宏基因组进行了交叉验证。
配方奶喂养的新生儿中机会性病原体如金黄色葡萄球菌、表皮葡萄球菌、肺炎克雷伯菌、产酸克雷伯菌和艰难梭菌的相对丰度更高。接受配方奶喂养的婴儿肠道细菌携带的 ARG 相对丰度高 69%(倍数变化,1.69;95%CI:1.12-2.55;P=0.013;n=180),而纯母乳喂养的婴儿则明显较少。接受配方奶喂养的婴儿也明显缺乏具有潜在健康益处的典型婴儿细菌,如双歧杆菌。
新发现表明,配方奶的暴露与新生儿更高的 ARG 负担相关,这为临床医生奠定了基础,即他们应考虑在婴儿生命的头几个月中除了使用抗生素之外,还应考虑喂养方式,以尽量减少抗生素耐药性肠道细菌在婴儿中的增殖。