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Antibiotics before age 2 associated with childhood health issues, study finds

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Photo Cred: Lisa Fotios/Pexels

By Katherine Shagoury

Antibiotics administered to children younger than 2 are associated with several ongoing illnesses or conditions, ranging from allergies to obesity, according to a new retrospective case study published in the journal Mayo Clinic Proceedings.

Using health record data from the Rochester Epidemiology Project, a population-based research collaboration in Minnesota and Wisconsin, researchers analyzed data from over 14,500 children. About 70 percent of the children had received at least one treatment with antibiotics for illness before age 2. Children receiving multiple antibiotic treatments were more likely to have multiple illnesses or conditions later in childhood.

Types and frequency of illness varied depending on age, type of medication, dose, and number of doses. There also were some differences between boys and girls. Conditions associated with early use of antibiotics included asthma, allergic rhinitis, weight issues and obesity, food allergies, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, celiac disease, and atopic dermatitis. The authors said that even though antibiotics may only transiently affect the microbiome, the collection of microbes in the body, this may have long-term health consequences.

While recent data show an increase in some of the childhood conditions involved in the study, experts are not sure why. Other than the issue of multidrug resistance, antibiotics have been presumed safe by most pediatricians.

Researchers also said the goal is to provide practical guidelines for physicians on the safest way to use antibiotics early in life.

“We want to emphasize that this study shows association, not causation, of these conditions,” says Nathan LeBrasseur, PhD, senior author of the study and a researcher at Mayo Clinic’s Robert and Arlene Kogod Center on Aging, in a statement. “These findings offer the opportunity to target future research to determine more reliable and safer approaches to timing, dosing, and types of antibiotics for children in this age group.”

About the Author: CJ Weber

Meet CJ Weber — the Content Specialist of Integrative Practitioner and Natural Medicine Journal. In addition to producing written content, Avery hosts the Integrative Practitioner Podcast and organizes Integrative Practitioner's webinars and digital summits