All Boards >> Irritable Bowel Syndrome Research Library

View all threads Posts     Flat     Threaded

Antibiotics Before Age 1 Tied to Celiac Disease Risk
      03/13/19 01:34 PM
HeatherAdministrator

Reged: 12/09/02
Posts: 7799
Loc: Seattle, WA

Antibiotics Before Age 1 Tied to Celiac Disease Risk

Results from Scandinavian study differ from TEDDY trial

by Diana Swift, Contributing Writer
March 05, 2019

Exposure to systemic antibiotics in the first year of life was modestly associated with later diagnosis of celiac disease, a national study of Danish and Norwegian children found.

In the observational study of two independent cohorts numbering more than 1.7 million children, a dispensed systemic antibiotic in the first year of life consistently correlated with diagnosed celiac disease, with a pooled odds ratio (OR) of 1.26 (95% CI 1.16-1.36), according to Stine Dydensborg Sander, MD, PhD, of Hans Christian Andersen Children's Hospital in Odense, Denmark, and colleagues.

And a dose-dependent relationship emerged as the number of antibiotic prescriptions increased (OR 1.08, 95% CI 1.05-1.11), they reported in Gastroenterology.

"These findings indicate that childhood exposure to systemic antibiotics may be a risk factor for celiac disease," the authors stated.

Other studies have found no such association, including the 2017 TEDDY study, a multinational cohort of children at high genetic risk of type 1 diabetes and celiac disease. TEDDY "found no association between parentally reported antibiotic exposure and persistently positive celiac disease," at age 4 years, Sander and colleagues noted.

"In contrast to population-based cohort studies that do not include cases of undiagnosed children, screening for celiac disease autoimmunity as the outcome captured all the children with celiac disease and some who never will develop celiac disease. Our findings may be affected if factors related to being diagnosed as opposed to remaining undiagnosed are related to the use of antibiotic," they stated.

Neither a specific type of antibiotic nor age at exposure were prominent factors in celiac disease, suggesting there is no particularly vulnerable age and no differing effect among antibiotic classes. The association was at least as strong for exposure from 0 to 24 months as for 0 to 12 months, Sander's group reported.

The study cohorts consisted of children born in Denmark from 1995 to 2012 (the Danish National Birth Cohort) and followed until May 2015, and children born in Norway from 2004 to 2012 (the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study) and followed until December 2013. The mothers answered questionnaires, sometimes aided by computer-assisted telephone interviews, on infectious diseases and feeding.

The final analysis in the Danish cohort included 1,168,656 children with a median age at end of follow-up of 11.6 years. A diagnosis of celiac disease was registered for 1,427 of these children (0.12%). Systemic antibiotics in the first year of life were dispensed to 451,196 participants without celiac disease (38.7%) and to 622 with celiac disease (43.6%).

The final Norwegian cohort consisted of 537,457 children, with a median age at end of follow-up of 5.4 years. Celiac disease was diagnosed in 1,919 (0.36%) of participants. Systemic antibiotics in the first year of life were dispensed to 98,538 without celiac disease (18.4%) and to 390 with celiac disease (20.3%).

Data from two large subgroups within the final cohort looked at the potentially confounding impact of adjustment for the number of children's maternally reported infections as well as the duration of breastfeeding, examined 6 and 18 months postpartum for 55,082 Danish children (100 with celiac disease) and 53,257 Norwegian children (464 with celiac disease). Neither variable had a measurable impact, nor did prescriptions for topical antifungal drugs, although these were more common in those registered for systemic antibiotics.

The authors pointed out that the intestinal microbiota is considered a player in pathogenesis of celiac disease and one strongly influenced by systemic antibiotics, especially in early life. Early-life infections have been proposed as promoters of celiac disease development and important potential confounders. Some studies have reported associations with types of infection, as well as the number of hospital admissions for infectious diseases, medically attended infectious diseases, and parentally reported infectious diseases.

Jocelyn A. Silvester, MD, of Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, commented that understanding the potential ties between antibiotics and celiac disease poses a challenge.

"This is a very difficult question to answer, even though this is one of the largest datasets we have to look at," said Silvester, who was not involved in the study.

She added that it is difficult to tease out the true relationship because of potential confounding factors, noting that not all antibiotic types have the same effect on the microbiota, and not all the infections treated with antibiotics were bacterial but may have included viral and fungal.

Underlying infection rather than antibiotics may have been driving the celiac risk. "But having large well-done studies that try to answer difficult questions is always a step in the right direction," Silvester said.

Study limitations included the difficulty of disentangling the effect of infections and antibiotics in an observational study lacking details of the infections and indications for antibiotic use.

The authors concluded that the findings could have resulted from reverse causality, in which the symptoms of celiac disease can mimic infection, exaggerate infectious symptoms, or raise the risk of infectious diseases, thereby increasing the propensity for prescriptions for antibiotics.

The study was funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation, the A.P. Møller Foundation, and Odense University Hospital's Research Grants.

The Danish National Birth Cohort was supported by multiple agencies including the Danish National Research Foundation, the Pharmacy Foundation, the Egmont Foundation, the March of Dimes Birth Defects Foundation, and the Health Foundation.

Sander and co-authors disclosed no relevant relationships with industry. Silvester disclosed consulting for Takeda.

last updated 03.06.2019


Source Reference: Sander SD, et al "Association between antibiotics in the first year of life and celiac disease" Gastroenterology 2019; DOI:10.1053/j.gastro.2019.02.039.

https://www.medpagetoday.com/gastroenterology/generalgastroenterology/78384?xid=nl_mpt_SRGastroenterology_2019-03-10&eun=g379602d0r&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=GastroUpdate_031019&utm_term=NL_Spec_Gastroenterology_Update_Active

--------------------
Heather is the Administrator of the IBS Message Boards. She is the author of Eating for IBS and The First Year: IBS, and the CEO of Heather's Tummy Care. Join her IBS Newsletter. Meet Heather on Facebook!

Print     Remind Me     Notify Moderator    

Entire thread
* Celiac / Gluten Intolerance
HeatherAdministrator
07/14/03 01:59 PM
* Antibiotics Before Age 1 Tied to Celiac Disease Risk
HeatherAdministrator
03/13/19 01:34 PM
* Fructans Suspect in Non-Celiac Gluten Sensitivity
HeatherAdministrator
03/19/18 02:44 PM
* Relatives, spouses of celiac disease patients at risk for autoimmune disease
HeatherAdministrator
07/09/15 03:39 PM
* Children with silent celiac
HeatherAdministrator
06/19/15 03:06 PM
* Delays in gluten introduction, onset of celiac disease in at-risk infants linked
HeatherAdministrator
10/07/14 02:23 PM
* Evidence points to Monsanto Roundup as culprit in rise of gluten intolerance & IBS
HeatherAdministrator
02/19/14 01:30 PM
* New approach to celiac testing identifies more at risk
HeatherAdministrator
08/30/13 12:11 PM
* Is a Gluten-Free Diet Right for You?
HeatherAdministrator
08/16/13 02:15 PM
* FDA Defines ‘Gluten-free’ for Food Labels
HeatherAdministrator
08/07/13 10:49 AM
* Tooth damage may be a sign of celiac disease
HeatherAdministrator
06/11/13 03:47 PM
* The Gluten-Free Vegetarian — Not to Worry, the Food Options Are Plentiful
HeatherAdministrator
04/17/13 12:01 PM
* Gluten-Free, Whether You Need It or Not
HeatherAdministrator
02/08/13 11:27 AM
* Non-celiac gluten sensitivity less common than celiac disease
HeatherAdministrator
10/31/12 11:32 AM
* Most Cases of Non-Responsive Celiac Disease Due to Ongoing Gluten Consumption
HeatherAdministrator
06/15/12 03:08 PM
* The good and the bad of going gluten free
HeatherAdministrator
06/15/12 01:18 PM
* Weird!! Patients with Non-celiac Gluten Sensitivity Report More Symptoms than Those with Celiac Disease
HeatherAdministrator
06/15/12 01:12 PM
* Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Gluten Sensitivity Without Celiac Disease
HeatherAdministrator
05/17/12 12:13 PM
* Celiac disease is more common in older adults
HeatherAdministrator
04/23/12 01:40 PM
* Celiac Disease on the Rise in U.S. - from sanitation and hygiene?
HeatherAdministrator
08/24/11 02:41 PM
* Birth Month Seems to Be Linked to Celiac Disease
HeatherAdministrator
05/09/11 11:50 AM
* More People May Benefit From Going Gluten-Free
HeatherAdministrator
05/09/11 11:44 AM
* Gluten Causes Gastrointestinal Symptoms in Subjects Without Celiac Disease
HeatherAdministrator
01/13/11 01:01 PM
* Celiac Disease Is Increasing Worldwide
HeatherAdministrator
08/04/10 11:57 AM
* Gluten intolerance versus celiac disease
HeatherAdministrator
04/14/10 10:27 AM
* Celiac disease may strike elderly, too
HeatherAdministrator
03/11/10 01:19 PM
* Gene links to celiac disease may help drug search
HeatherAdministrator
03/11/10 12:57 PM
* Genetic links to celiac disease identified
HeatherAdministrator
03/05/10 02:36 PM
* People on gluten-free diets benefit from oats
HeatherAdministrator
03/05/10 12:23 PM
* Between Celiac Disease and Irritable Bowel Syndrome
HeatherAdministrator
03/05/10 11:49 AM
* Study confirms four-fold increase in wheat gluten disorder
HeatherAdministrator
07/22/09 01:15 PM
* Effect of gluten-free diet and co-morbidity of irritable bowel syndrome-type symptoms on celiac patients
HeatherAdministrator
03/18/09 05:46 PM
* Gluten-Free Diet in Patients Diagnosed With Diarrhea-Predominant Irritable Bowel Syndrome
HeatherAdministrator
07/17/07 11:18 AM
* Non-Toxic Wheat May Be an Answer to Celiac Disease
HeatherAdministrator
10/28/05 11:57 AM
* Babies at Celiac Disease Risk Should Wait for Wheat
HeatherAdministrator
06/20/05 04:24 PM
* Relief for celiac patients
HeatherAdministrator
06/05/05 05:48 PM
* Gastrointestinal Motility Disturbances in Celiac Disease.
HeatherAdministrator
09/12/04 03:27 PM
* Celiac Disease: Where We Are and Where We Are Going
HeatherAdministrator
06/27/04 01:58 PM
* No Link Apparent Between IBS and Celiac Disease
HeatherAdministrator
04/27/04 09:01 PM
* Oats Safe for Celiac in Children
HeatherAdministrator
04/26/04 01:08 PM
* Celiac disease is a risk factor for schizophrenia
HeatherAdministrator
02/24/04 02:13 PM
* Against the grain: The growing awareness of celiac sprue
HeatherAdministrator
08/12/03 12:12 PM
* Celiac disease: fertility and pregnancy.
HeatherAdministrator
07/15/03 06:14 PM
* Celiac disease and spontaneous abortion
HeatherAdministrator
07/15/03 06:12 PM
* Is it necessary to screen for celiac disease in postmenopausal osteoporotic women?
HeatherAdministrator
07/15/03 06:09 PM
* Celiac Disease: More Common Than You Think
HeatherAdministrator
07/14/03 04:15 PM
* High prevalence of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth in celiac patients
HeatherAdministrator
07/14/03 03:04 PM

Extra information
0 registered and 32 anonymous users are browsing this forum.

Moderator:  Heather 



Permissions
      You cannot post until you login
      You cannot reply until you login
      HTML is enabled
      UBBCode is enabled

Thread views: 188653

Jump to

| Privacy statement Help for IBS Home

*
UBB.threads™ 6.2


HelpForIBS.com BBB Business Review