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Association of prenatal antibiotics with foetal size and cord blood leptin and adiponectin

Authors :
N T, Mueller
S L, Rifas-Shiman
M J, Blaser
M W, Gillman
M-F, Hivert
Source :
Pediatric obesity. 12(2)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Early postnatal antibiotic use has been shown to promote excess weight gain, but it is unclear whether intrauterine exposure to antibiotics is associated with foetal growth and adiposity. The objective of this study was to examine associations of antibiotic prescription in each trimester of pregnancy with foetal size and adipokine levels at birth.In 2128 pregnant women from the pre-birth Project Viva cohort, from electronic medical records, we estimated antibiotic prescribing by timing during pregnancy. Outcomes were sex-specific birth weight-for-gestational-age z-score (BW/GA-z) and levels of umbilical cord leptin and adiponectin. We used linear regression models adjusted for maternal age, pre-pregnancy body mass index, parity, race/ethnicity, education, smoking during pregnancy, household income and child sex and additionally adjusted cord blood leptin and adiponectin models for gestation length.Of the 2128 women in our sample, 643 (30.2%) were prescribed with oral antibiotics during pregnancy. Mean (standard deviation) BW/GA-z was 0.17 (0.97), cord blood leptin was 9.0 ng mLAntibiotics in mid-pregnancy were associated with lower birth weight for gestational age, whereas third trimester antibiotics were associated with higher cord blood leptin.

Details

ISSN :
20476310
Volume :
12
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatric obesity
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........532ccf3d09c08537503adbc30fa0981d