Abstract

Plain Language SummaryPreterm infants often receive a variety of antibiotic exposure duration during admission. This study was to evaluate whether neonatal antibiotic exposure is associated with longitudinal growth problems in preterm-birth children. This study followed a cohort of 328 very preterm infants born <32 weeks of gestation, who were discharged from a tertiary hospital without documented neonatal bacterial infection from 2004 to 2016 and received longitudinal follow-up for growth outcomes at their corrected age (CA) 6, 12, 24, and 60 months. We collected perinatal demographics, neonatal morbidities, extrauterine growth restriction, and antibiotic exposure duration by term equivalent age, to associate with trajectories in z-scores of bodyweight (zBW), body height (zBH), and body mass index (zBMI) from CA 6–60 months. We found antibiotic exposure duration was negatively associated with zBW and zBH at CA 6, 12, and 60 months, and zBMI at CA 60 months. After adjustments, antibiotic exposure duration was associated with decreased growth velocity in zBW and zBH from CA 6–60 months. Children with longer antibiotic exposure >15 days had significantly lower zBW, zBH, and zBMI at CA 6, 12, 24, and 60 months compared with children with antibiotic exposure ≤15 days (all p < 0.01), suggesting that longer antibiotic exposure duration was associated with inferior weight and height gains. This study concludes that long-term growth increments may negatively associate with neonatal antibiotic exposure duration in children born very premature, implicating that antibiotic stewardship and growth follow-up for preterm neonates are thus warranted.

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