Cargando…

The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence

INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is associated with increased risk of airway infections in childhood, more frequent purchase of prescription antibiotics and hospital admissions for airway infections. With this study, we aimed to investigate whether this association persists into adolescence. METHODS: We...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Garioud, Anne Louise de Barros, Skoven, Frederikke Høeg, Gregersen, Rasmus, Lange, Theis, Buchvald, Fsrederik, Greisen, Gorm
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7470365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32881953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238382
_version_ 1783578572139528192
author Garioud, Anne Louise de Barros
Skoven, Frederikke Høeg
Gregersen, Rasmus
Lange, Theis
Buchvald, Fsrederik
Greisen, Gorm
author_facet Garioud, Anne Louise de Barros
Skoven, Frederikke Høeg
Gregersen, Rasmus
Lange, Theis
Buchvald, Fsrederik
Greisen, Gorm
author_sort Garioud, Anne Louise de Barros
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is associated with increased risk of airway infections in childhood, more frequent purchase of prescription antibiotics and hospital admissions for airway infections. With this study, we aimed to investigate whether this association persists into adolescence. METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal observational register-based study of a national cohort of all infants born in Denmark in 1992–2007. We used purchase of antibiotics, including penicillins and macrolides, and hospital admissions as proxies for milder and more severe forms of airway infections respectively in 1995–2010. Associations between gestational age (GA), age, year and repeated cross-sectional evaluations of antibiotic purchase and hospital admissions were explored by logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: We included 1,043,411 children in our study population. We found a statistically significant association between GA and prescription of antibiotics as well as hospital admissions due to airway infections. In the youngest age groups, children with higher GA had lower adjusted mean rates of prescribed antibiotics for airway infections, but from the age of 10–11 years the opposite trend was noted in what appears to be a dose-response relationship. During childhood, we found an inverse dose-response relationship where ex-preterms with GA 23–27 at age 4–5 years had twice the odds of hospital admission compared to children in the same age group born at term. During adolescence, these higher odds diminished and appeared equivalent among teenagers born at term and preterm. We only found statistically significant interactions between gestational age and age. CONCLUSION: We confirmed that preterm birth is associated with higher rates of prescribed antibiotics and higher odds of hospitalization for airway infections during childhood. However, in adolescence we found that there was no increase in hospital admissions for airway infections among ex-preterms, whereas adolescents with low GA actually appeared to purchase less prescribed antibiotics. Whether this trend persists into adulthood and the physiological explanation therefor remains to be investigated.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7470365
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-74703652020-09-11 The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence Garioud, Anne Louise de Barros Skoven, Frederikke Høeg Gregersen, Rasmus Lange, Theis Buchvald, Fsrederik Greisen, Gorm PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Preterm birth is associated with increased risk of airway infections in childhood, more frequent purchase of prescription antibiotics and hospital admissions for airway infections. With this study, we aimed to investigate whether this association persists into adolescence. METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal observational register-based study of a national cohort of all infants born in Denmark in 1992–2007. We used purchase of antibiotics, including penicillins and macrolides, and hospital admissions as proxies for milder and more severe forms of airway infections respectively in 1995–2010. Associations between gestational age (GA), age, year and repeated cross-sectional evaluations of antibiotic purchase and hospital admissions were explored by logistic regression analyses. RESULTS: We included 1,043,411 children in our study population. We found a statistically significant association between GA and prescription of antibiotics as well as hospital admissions due to airway infections. In the youngest age groups, children with higher GA had lower adjusted mean rates of prescribed antibiotics for airway infections, but from the age of 10–11 years the opposite trend was noted in what appears to be a dose-response relationship. During childhood, we found an inverse dose-response relationship where ex-preterms with GA 23–27 at age 4–5 years had twice the odds of hospital admission compared to children in the same age group born at term. During adolescence, these higher odds diminished and appeared equivalent among teenagers born at term and preterm. We only found statistically significant interactions between gestational age and age. CONCLUSION: We confirmed that preterm birth is associated with higher rates of prescribed antibiotics and higher odds of hospitalization for airway infections during childhood. However, in adolescence we found that there was no increase in hospital admissions for airway infections among ex-preterms, whereas adolescents with low GA actually appeared to purchase less prescribed antibiotics. Whether this trend persists into adulthood and the physiological explanation therefor remains to be investigated. Public Library of Science 2020-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC7470365/ /pubmed/32881953 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238382 Text en © 2020 Garioud et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garioud, Anne Louise de Barros
Skoven, Frederikke Høeg
Gregersen, Rasmus
Lange, Theis
Buchvald, Fsrederik
Greisen, Gorm
The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
title The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
title_full The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
title_fullStr The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
title_full_unstemmed The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
title_short The increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
title_sort increased susceptibility to airway infections after preterm birth does not persist into adolescence
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7470365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32881953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238382
work_keys_str_mv AT garioudannelouisedebarros theincreasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT skovenfrederikkehøeg theincreasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT gregersenrasmus theincreasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT langetheis theincreasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT buchvaldfsrederik theincreasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT greisengorm theincreasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT garioudannelouisedebarros increasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT skovenfrederikkehøeg increasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT gregersenrasmus increasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT langetheis increasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT buchvaldfsrederik increasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence
AT greisengorm increasedsusceptibilitytoairwayinfectionsafterpretermbirthdoesnotpersistintoadolescence