Childhood lower respiratory tract infections linked to residential airborne bacterial and fungal microbiota

被引:0
|
作者
Fakunle, Adekunle G. [1 ,2 ]
Jafta, Nkosana [1 ]
Bossers, Alex [3 ]
Wouters, Inge M. [3 ]
van Kersen, Warner [3 ]
Naidoo, Rajen N. [1 ]
Smit, Lidwien A. M. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Discipline Occupat & Environm Hlth, 321 George Campbell Bldg Howard Coll Campus, ZA-4041 Durban, South Africa
[2] Osun State Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Osogbo, Osun State, Nigeria
[3] Univ Utrecht, Inst Risk Assessment Sci IRAS, Utrecht, Netherlands
关键词
Indoor microbiota; Lower respiratory tract infections; Under -five children; High -throughput sequencing; Sub-saharan africa; INDOOR AIR; HOUSE-DUST; DIVERSITY; ASTHMA; PNEUMONIA; COLLECTOR; SEVERITY; EXPOSURE; PROJECT;
D O I
10.1016/j.envres.2023.116063
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Residential microbial composition likely contributes to the development of lower respiratory tract infections (LRTI) among children, but the association is poorly understood. We aimed to study the relationship between the indoor airborne dust bacterial and fungal microbiota and childhood LRTI in Ibadan, Nigeria. Ninety-eight children under the age of five years hospitalized with LRTI were recruited and matched by age (+/- 3 months), sex, and geographical location to 99 community-based controls without LRTI. Participants' homes were visited and sampled over a 14-day period for airborne house dust using electrostatic dustfall collectors (EDC). In airborne dust samples, the composition of bacterial and fungal communities was characterized by a meta-barcoding approach using amplicons targeting simultaneously the bacterial 16S rRNA gene and the internal-transcribed-spacer (ITS) region-1 of fungi in association with the SILVA and UNITE database respectively. A 100-unit change in house dust bacterial, but not fungal, richness (OR 1.06; 95%CI 1.03-1.10) and a 1-unit change in Shannon diversity (OR 1.92; 95%CI 1.28-3.01) were both independently associated with childhood LRTI after adjusting for other indoor environmental risk factors. Beta-diversity analysis showed that bacterial (PERMANOVA p < 0.001, R2 = 0.036) and fungal (PERMANOVA p < 0.001, R2 = 0.028) community composition differed significantly between homes of cases and controls. Pair-wise differential abundance analysis using both DESEq2 and MaAsLin2 consistently identified the bacterial phyla Deinococcota (Benjamini-Hochberg (BH) adjusted p-value <0.001) and Bacteriodota (BH-adjusted p-value = 0.004) to be negatively associated with LRTI. Within the fungal microbiota, phylum Ascomycota abundance (BH adjusted p-value <0.001) was observed to be directly associated with LRTI, while Basidiomycota abundance (BH adjusted p-value <0.001) was negatively associated with LRTI. Our study suggests that early-life exposure to certain airborne bacterial and fungal communities is associated with LRTI among children under the age of five years.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] LOWER RESPIRATORY-TRACT INFECTIONS IN CHILDHOOD
    不详
    LANCET, 1985, 1 (8431): : 734 - 735
  • [2] Lower respiratory tract infections in early childhood
    Guo, Jianning
    Niu, Wenquan
    Zhang, Qi
    Cui, Xia
    LANCET, 2023, 402 (10418):
  • [3] Investigation of bacterial infections of the lower respiratory tract
    Boersma, WG
    Holloway, Y
    CURRENT OPINION IN INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 1996, 9 (02) : 76 - 84
  • [4] Bacterial microbiota of the upper respiratory tract and childhood asthma
    Depner, Martin
    Ege, Markus J.
    Cox, Michael J.
    Dwyer, Sarah
    Walker, Alan W.
    Birzele, Lena T.
    Genuneit, Jon
    Horak, Elisabeth
    Braun-Fahrlaender, Charlotte
    Danielewicz, Hanna
    Maier, Raina M.
    Moffatt, Miriam F.
    Cookson, William O.
    Heederik, Dick
    von Mutius, Erika
    Legatzki, Antje
    JOURNAL OF ALLERGY AND CLINICAL IMMUNOLOGY, 2017, 139 (03) : 826 - +
  • [5] Bacterial and Viral Respiratory Tract Microbiota and Host Characteristics in Adults With Lower Respiratory Tract Infections: A Case-Control Study
    Haak, Bastiaan W.
    Brands, Xanthe
    Davids, Mark
    Peters-Sengers, Hessel
    Kullberg, Robert F. J.
    van Houdt, Robin
    Hugenholtz, Floor
    Faber, Daniel R.
    Zaaijer, Hans L.
    Scicluna, Brendon P.
    van der Poll, Tom
    Wiersinga, W. Joost
    CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2022, 74 (05) : 776 - 784
  • [6] Microbiological diagnosis of bacterial lower respiratory tract infections
    Antonia Meseguer, Maria
    Begona Cacho, Juana
    Oliver, Antonio
    de la Bellacasa, Jorge Puig
    ENFERMEDADES INFECCIOSAS Y MICROBIOLOGIA CLINICA, 2008, 26 (07): : 430 - 436
  • [7] Microbiological diagnostic of bacterial infections of the lower respiratory tract
    Calvo, Juana Begona Cacho
    Peinado, Maria Antonia Meseguer
    Palomo, Antonio Oliver
    de la Bellacasa, Jorge Puig
    ENFERMEDADES INFECCIOSAS Y MICROBIOLOGIA CLINICA, 2007, 25 (07): : 496 - 496
  • [8] Mixed bacterial-fungal infections in the CF respiratory tract
    Leclair, Laurie Whittaker
    Hogan, Deborah A.
    MEDICAL MYCOLOGY, 2010, 48 : S125 - S132
  • [9] Bacterial and viral respiratory tract microbiota and host characteristics in children with lower respiratory tract infections: a matched case-control study
    Man, Wing Ho
    van Houten, Marlies A.
    Merelle, Marieke E.
    Vlieger, Arine M.
    Chu, Mei Ling J. N.
    Jansen, Nicolaas J. G.
    Sanders, Elisabeth A. M.
    Bogaert, Debby
    LANCET RESPIRATORY MEDICINE, 2019, 7 (05): : 417 - 426
  • [10] Lower Respiratory Tract Infections: Risks Are High in Early Childhood
    Marraro, Giuseppe A.
    Spada, Claudio
    PEDIATRIC CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2016, 17 (08) : 806 - 808