4.5 Review

Impact of Intrapartum Antibiotic Prophylaxis on Offspring Microbiota

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.754013

Keywords

intrapartum antibiotics; IAP; microbiota; pregnancy; offspring dysbiosis; neonatal microbiome

Categories

Funding

  1. GPP Program (University of Virginia)
  2. NINR [1ZIABC011153-09, F31NR017821, 1ZIANR000018]
  3. [GT: 1ZIABC011153-09]

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Studies suggest that antibiotic use during pregnancy may lead to dysbiosis in infants, increasing the risk of obesity, allergies, autoimmunity, and chronic diseases in adulthood. Intravenous antibiotics can alter the normal colonization process of newborn microbial community, particularly by decreasing Bacteroidetes and increasing Proteobacteria. Cesarean section and formula feeding can exacerbate and prolong this effect.
Infants are born into a world filled with microbes and must adapt without undue immune response while exploiting the microbiota's ability to produce otherwise unavailable nutrients. The process by which humans and microbes establish this relationship has only recently begun to be studied with the aid of genomic methods. Nearly half of all pregnant women receive antibiotics during gestation to prevent maternal and neonatal infection. Though this has been largely successful in reducing early-onset sepsis, we have yet to understand the long-term consequences of antibiotic administration during gestation to developing infants. Studies involving antibiotic use in infants suggest that dysbiosis during this period is associated with increased obesity, allergy, autoimmunity, and chronic diseases in adulthood, however, research around the limited doses of intravenous antibiotics used for intrapartum prophylaxis is limited. In this mini review, we focused on the state of the science regarding the effects of intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis on the newborn microbial colonization process. Although, the literature indicates that there is wide variety in the specific bacteria that colonize infants from birth, limited parenteral antibiotic administration prior to delivery consistently affects the microbiota of infants by decreasing bacteria in the phylum Bacteroidetes and increasing bacteria in the phylum Proteobacteria, thus altering the normal pattern of colonization that infants experience. Delivery by cesarean section and formula feeding magnify and prolong this effect. Our mini review shows that the impact of intravenous antibiotic administration during gestation has on early colonization, growth, or immune programming in the developing offspring has not been well studied in human or animal models.

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