News

Study describes possible antibiotics-JIA link


 

References

Antibiotic exposure was associated with newly diagnosed juvenile idiopathic arthritis, according to results published by Dr. Daniel B. Horton and coauthors from the department of pediatrics at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, N.J.

In a case-control study that compared children who had newly diagnosed juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) with controls matched by age and gender, antibiotic exposure was associated with an increased rate of JIA (adjusted odds ratio, 2.1; 95% confidence interval, 1.2-3.5). The relationship was strongest within 1 year of diagnosis, and was dose dependent, with an increased magnitude of association with more antibiotic courses (P < .001), Dr. Horton and his colleagues reported.

Dr. Daniel B. Horton

Dr. Daniel B. Horton

The findings suggest “a potential role for antibiotics in the pathogenesis of JIA, perhaps mediated through changes in the microbiome,” the authors said. “If this association is causal, antibiotics could be considered a potentially modifiable risk factor for JIA, especially in light of the overprescribing of antibiotics to children, particularly for respiratory tract infections.”

Additionally, children with JIA “may also be at risk for more infections before diagnosis due to immune dysfunction, and a causal role for infections remains a possibility,” the authors concluded.

The full study was published online July 20 in Pediatrics (doi:10.1542/peds.2015-0036).

mrajaraman@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

Researchers pin down possible cause, source for narcolepsy associated with flu vaccine
MDedge Family Medicine
Hospital clinicians commonly work while sick
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA sued for access to data on hepatitis C medications
MDedge Family Medicine
WCD: As MRSA situation worsens, don’t overlook strep
MDedge Family Medicine
Oral cholera vaccine reduced incidence of disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Sepsis’ readmission costs dwarf heart attack, heart failure costs
MDedge Family Medicine
CAP shifting to viral disease as vaccines knock out bacterial causes
MDedge Family Medicine
Don’t defer antiretrovirals in asymptomatic HIV patients
MDedge Family Medicine
Water woes: Recognizing and treating recreational water illness
MDedge Family Medicine
Dicloxacillin may cut INR levels in warfarin users
MDedge Family Medicine