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920. A Sharp Fall in Antibiotic Use in Infants Is Correlated With a Population-Wide Reduction in Asthma Incidence for Children Under 5

BACKGROUND: Antibiotic use in infants <1 is associated with increased relative risk (~1.5) for childhood asthma in cohort studies. This may be mediated by removal from the infant microbiome of organisms shown to protect against asthma, a hypothesis supported by experiment. We launched this study...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Patrick, David, Mamun, Abdullah, Rasali, Drona, Rose, Caren, Marra, Fawziah
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6252788/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofy209.061
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Antibiotic use in infants <1 is associated with increased relative risk (~1.5) for childhood asthma in cohort studies. This may be mediated by removal from the infant microbiome of organisms shown to protect against asthma, a hypothesis supported by experiment. We launched this study to see whether reductions in antibiotic use at population level are associated with benefit by way of asthma reduction. METHODS: We obtained antibiotic prescribing data from BC PharmaNet, a population-based database that captures all outpatient prescribing for British Columbia, Canada (n = 4.7 million). We focused on prescriptions in children <1 and calculated prescription rate per 1,000 population per year. We obtained asthma incidence data from the BC Ministry of Health Chronic Disease Registry. Asthma case identification uses a standard case definition making use of community and hospital diagnostic codes as well as asthma drug data from BC’s universal physician billing, hospital and drug databases. We focused on age-stratified asthma incidence for children aged 1–4. The correlation between antibiotic prescription rate in children < 1 and asthma incidence in the following year was estimated using the Spearman test. RESULTS: Antibiotic prescribing for all age groups fell 9.5% between 1999 and 2013. The rate for infants <1 dropped 58% from 1,014 to 427 prescriptions per 1,000 population/year. Between 2000 and 2014, asthma incidence (ages 1–4) fell 26% from 27.3 (95% CI: 26.5–28.0) to 20.2 (95% CI: 19.5–20.8) per 1,000 population/year. These trends were strongly correlated: Spearman’s rho = 0.81 (P = 0.0002). The magnitude of fall in asthma incidence is slightly greater than that predicted based on calculated population attributable risk for antibiotic exposure. CONCLUSION: The population health benefit from antibiotic stewardship in infants may not be confined to slowing the emergence of resistance and could include a reduced risk of asthma. As this is a population-based ecological study, a reduction in other risk factors may also have contributed to the fall in asthma incidence. This promising trend should be further studied at individual level within a large cohort study. [Image: see text] DISCLOSURES: All authors: No reported disclosures.