PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Childhood infection burden, recent antibiotic exposure and vascular phenotypes in preschool children.

  • Angela Yu,
  • Maria A C Jansen,
  • Geertje W Dalmeijer,
  • Patricia Bruijning-Verhagen,
  • Cornelis K van der Ent,
  • Diederick E Grobbee,
  • David P Burgner,
  • Cuno S P M Uiterwaal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0290633
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 9
p. e0290633

Abstract

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BackgroundSevere childhood infection has a dose-dependent association with adult cardiovascular events and with adverse cardiometabolic phenotypes. The relationship between cardiovascular outcomes and less severe childhood infections is unclear.AimTo investigate the relationship between common, non-hospitalised infections, antibiotic exposure, and preclinical vascular phenotypes in young children.DesignA Dutch prospective population-derived birth cohort study.MethodsParticipants were from the Wheezing-Illnesses-Study-Leidsche-Rijn (WHISTLER) birth cohort. We collected data from birth to 5 years on antibiotic prescriptions, general practitioner (GP)-diagnosed infections, and monthly parent-reported febrile illnesses (0-1 years). At 5 years, carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT), carotid artery distensibility, and blood pressure (BP) were measured. General linear regression models were adjusted for age, sex, smoke exposure, birth weight z-score, body mass index, and socioeconomic status.ResultsRecent antibiotic exposure was associated with adverse cardiovascular phenotypes; each antibiotic prescription in the 3 and 6 months prior to vascular assessment was associated with an 18.1 μm (95% confidence interval, 4.5-31.6, p = 0.01) and 10.7 μm (0.8-20.5, p = 0.03) increase in CIMT, respectively. Each additional antibiotic prescription in the preceding 6 months was associated with an 8.3 mPa-1 decrease in carotid distensibility (-15.6- -1.1, p = 0.02). Any parent-reported febrile episode (compared to none) showed weak evidence of association with diastolic BP (1.6 mmHg increase, 0.04-3.1, p = 0.04). GP-diagnosed infections were not associated with vascular phenotypes.ConclusionsRecent antibiotics are associated with adverse vascular phenotypes in early childhood. Mechanistic studies may differentiate antibiotic-related from infection-related effects and inform preventative strategies.