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Early-Life Respiratory Infections in Infants with Cow's Milk Allergy: An Expert Opinion on the Available Evidence and Recommendations for Future Research

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13113795

Keywords

infection; upper respiratory tract infection; infants; cow's milk allergy; breastfeeding; microbiota; dysbiosis; infant formula; synbiotic

Funding

  1. Danone Specialized Nutrition

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Acute respiratory infections are a common cause of morbidity in infants and young children, impacting healthcare resources and antibiotic use, and potentially leading to antibiotic resistance and changes in intestinal microbiota composition. Through international collaboration, researchers are exploring the links between infant feeding, cow's milk allergy, and infection risk, with a focus on strategies to improve infection outcomes and reduce antibiotic usage in vulnerable populations like infants with CMA.
Acute respiratory infections are a common cause of morbidity in infants and young children. This high rate of respiratory infections in early life has a major impact on healthcare resources and antibiotic use, with the associated risk of increasing antibiotic resistance, changes in intestinal microbiota composition and activity and, consequently, on the future health of children. An international group of clinicians and researchers working in infant nutrition and cow's milk allergy (CMA) met to review the available evidence on the prevalence of infections in healthy infants and in those with allergies, particularly CMA; the factors that influence susceptibility to infection in early life; links between infant feeding, CMA and infection risk; and potential strategies to modulate the gut microbiota and infection outcomes. The increased susceptibility of infants with CMA to infections, and the reported potential benefits with prebiotics, probiotics and synbiotics with regard to improving infection outcomes and reducing antibiotic usage in infants with CMA, makes this a clinically important issue that merits further research.

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