4.2 Article

Fetal exposures and perinatal influences on the stool microbiota of premature infants

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERNAL-FETAL & NEONATAL MEDICINE
Volume 29, Issue 1, Pages 99-105

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.3109/14767058.2014.987748

Keywords

Antibiotics; chorioamnionitis; microbiome; obstetrical complications; obstetrical interventions; PPPROM; prematurity

Funding

  1. Hearst Foundation
  2. Joshua Burnett Career Development Award through the Hitchcock Foundation (Dartmouth)
  3. CF Foundation Harry Shwachman Clinical Investigator Award
  4. CTSA grant from NCATS [KL2TR000119]
  5. Neukom Institute
  6. NIH [K01LM011985, R01AI59694, GM103534, GM103506, 5T32DK007301-35, 4UH3DK 083993, K24AT003683]

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Objective: To test the hypothesis that maternal complications significantly affect gut colonization patterns in very low birth weight infants.Methods: Forty-nine serial stool samples were obtained weekly from nine extremely premature infants enrolled in a prospective longitudinal study. Sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene from stool samples was performed to approximate the intestinal microbiome. Linear mixed effects models were used to evaluate relationships between perinatal complications and intestinal microbiome development.Results: Subjects with prenatal exposure to a non-sterile intrauterine environment, i.e. prolonged preterm premature rupture of membranes (PPPROM) and chorioamnionitis exposure, were found to have a relatively higher abundance of potentially pathogenic bacteria in the stool across all time points compared to subjects without those exposures, irrespective of exposure to postnatal antibiotics. Compared with those delivered by Caesarean section, vaginally delivered subjects were found to have significantly lower diversity of stool microbiota across all time points, with lower abundance of many genera, most in the family Enterobacteriaceae.Conclusions: We identified persistently increased potential pathogen abundance in the developing stool microbiota of subjects exposed to a non-sterile uterine environment. Maternal complications appear to significantly influence the diversity and bacterial composition of the stool microbiota of premature infants, with findings persisting over time.

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