Antibiotic exposure is associated with minimal gut microbiome perturbations in healthy term infants

  • Alain J. Benitez
  • , Ceylan Tanes
  • , Elliot S. Friedman
  • , Joseph P. Zackular
  • , Eileen Ford
  • , Jeffrey S. Gerber
  • , Patricia A. DeRusso
  • , Andrea Kelly
  • , Hongzhe Li
  • , Michal A. Elovitz
  • , Gary D. Wu
  • , Babette Zemel
  • , Kyle Bittinger

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: The evolving infant gut microbiome influences host immune development and later health outcomes. Early antibiotic exposure could impact microbiome development and contribute to poor outcomes. Here, we use a prospective longitudinal birth cohort of n = 323 healthy term African American children to determine the association between antibiotic exposure and the gut microbiome through shotgun metagenomics sequencing as well as bile acid profiles through liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Results: Stool samples were collected at ages 4, 12, and 24 months for antibiotic-exposed (n = 170) and unexposed (n = 153) participants. A short-term substudy (n = 39) collected stool samples at first exposure, and over 3 weeks following antibiotics initiation. Antibiotic exposure (predominantly amoxicillin) was associated with minimal microbiome differences, whereas all tested taxa were modified by breastfeeding. In the short-term substudy, we observed microbiome differences only in the first 2 weeks following antibiotics initiation, mainly a decrease in Bifidobacterium bifidum. The differences did not persist a month after antibiotic exposure. Four species were associated with infant age. Antibiotic exposure was not associated with an increase in antibiotic resistance gene abundance or with differences in microbiome-derived fecal bile acid composition. Conclusions: Short-term and long-term gut microbiome perturbations by antibiotic exposure were detectable but substantially smaller than those associated with breastfeeding and infant age.

Original languageEnglish
Article number21
JournalMicrobiome
Volume13
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Amoxicillin
  • Antibiotics
  • Bifidobacterium
  • Bile acid
  • Infant gut microbiota
  • Metagenomics

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