Channing Division of Network Medicine, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, 181 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Copenhagen Prospective Studies on Asthma in Childhood (COPSAC), Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, University of Copenhagen, 2820, Gentofte, Denmark.
Sci Rep. 2023 Jun 28;13(1):10461. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-36535-0.
Respiratory infections are a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in early life, and recurrent infections increase the risk of developing chronic diseases. The maternal environment during pregnancy can impact offspring health, but the factors leading to increased infection proneness have not been well characterized during this period. Steroids have been implicated in respiratory health outcomes and may similarly influence infection susceptibility. Our objective was to describe relationships between maternal steroid levels and offspring infection proneness. Using adjusted Poisson regression models, we evaluated associations between sixteen androgenic and corticosteroid metabolites during pregnancy and offspring respiratory infection incidence across two pre-birth cohorts (N = 774 in VDAART and N = 729 in COPSAC). Steroid metabolites were measured in plasma samples from pregnant mothers across all trimesters of pregnancy by ultrahigh-performance-liquid-chromatography/mass-spectrometry. We conducted further inquiry into associations of steroids with related respiratory outcomes: asthma and lung function spirometry. Higher plasma corticosteroid levels in the third trimester of pregnancy were associated with lower incidence of offspring respiratory infections (P = 4.45 × 10 to 0.002) and improved lung function metrics (P = 0.020-0.036). Elevated maternal androgens were generally associated with increased offspring respiratory infections and worse lung function, with some associations demonstrating nominal significance at P < 0.05, but these trends were inconsistent across individual androgens. Increased maternal plasma corticosteroid levels in the late second and third trimesters were associated with lower infections and better lung function in offspring, which may represent a potential avenue for intervention through corticosteroid supplementation in late pregnancy to reduce offspring respiratory infection susceptibility in early life.Clinical Trial Registry information: VDAART and COPSAC were originally conducted as clinical trials; VDAART: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00920621; COPSAC: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00798226.
呼吸道感染是婴幼儿发病和死亡的主要原因,反复感染会增加罹患慢性疾病的风险。孕期母体环境会影响后代健康,但在此期间,导致易感染性增加的因素尚未得到很好的描述。类固醇已被牵涉到呼吸道健康结果中,并且可能同样会影响感染易感性。我们的目标是描述母体类固醇水平与后代易感染性之间的关系。使用调整后的泊松回归模型,我们评估了妊娠期间 16 种雄激素和皮质类固醇代谢物与两个产前队列(VDAART 中为 774 名,COPSAC 中为 729 名)中后代呼吸道感染发生率之间的关联。通过超高效液相色谱/质谱法在妊娠母亲的所有妊娠 trimester 血浆样本中测量类固醇代谢物。我们进一步研究了类固醇与相关呼吸道结局(哮喘和肺功能肺活量测定)的关联。妊娠晚期血浆皮质类固醇水平升高与后代呼吸道感染发生率较低(P = 4.45×10 到 0.002)和改善的肺功能指标相关(P = 0.020-0.036)相关。母体雄激素水平升高通常与后代呼吸道感染增加和肺功能恶化相关,其中一些关联在 P < 0.05 时具有名义显著性,但这些趋势在个体雄激素之间不一致。妊娠晚期母体血浆皮质类固醇水平升高与后代感染减少和肺功能改善相关,这可能代表通过妊娠晚期皮质类固醇补充降低婴幼儿呼吸道感染易感性的潜在干预途径。临床试验注册信息:VDAART 和 COPSAC 最初作为临床试验进行;VDAART:ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符 NCT00920621;COPSAC:ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符 NCT00798226。