Common antibiotics alter gut bacteria for years, study reveals
A major Swedish study tracking nearly 15,000 people found that antibiotics can disrupt the gut microbiome for up to 8 years after use. The finding matters to pharma companies, healthcare systems, and insurers because it suggests the hidden costs of antibiotic prescriptions extend far longer than previously known, potentially affecting disease risk and treatment outcomes long after patients finish their pills.
Originaltitel: Antibiotic use and gut microbiome composition links from individual-level prescription data of 14,979 individuals
Disruptions in gut microbiome are implicated in cardiometabolic disorders and other health outcomes. Antibiotics are known gut microbiome disruptors, but their long-term consequences remain underexplored. Here we combined individual-level data from the Swedish Prescribed Drug Register with fecal metagenomes of 14,979 adults to examine the association between oral antibiotic use over 8 years and gut microbiome. In multivariable confounder-adjusted regression models, antibiotic use <1 year before fecal sampling was associated with the greatest reduction in species diversity, but significant associations were also observed for use 1-4 and 4-8 years earlier. Clindamycin, fluoroquinolones and flucloxacillin accounted for most of the associations with the abundance of individual species. Use of these antibiotics 4-8 years earlier was associated with altered abundance of 10-15% of the species studied; penicillin V, extended-spectrum penicillins and nitrofurantoin were associated with only a few species. Similar results were found comparing one antibiotic course 4-8 years before sampling versus none in the past 8 years. These findings indicate that antibiotics may have long-lasting consequences for the gut microbiome.