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. 2021 Nov;9(9):1074-1080.
doi: 10.1002/ueg2.12164. Epub 2021 Oct 15.

Antibiotic use but not gastrointestinal infection frequently precedes first diagnosis of functional gastrointestinal disorders

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Antibiotic use but not gastrointestinal infection frequently precedes first diagnosis of functional gastrointestinal disorders

Michael P Jones et al. United European Gastroenterol J. 2021 Nov.

Abstract

Introduction: While the etiopathogenesis of functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) is not completely understood, alterations of the intestinal microbiome have been observed. Antibiotics can induce dysbiosis, but whether antibiotics are a risk factor for the onset of FGIDs is uncertain. Antibiotics have been reported as both a risk factor for new onset FGID but also as a therapy for existing FGID. This study aimed to estimate the fraction of cases where antibiotics provoked the onset of FGID.

Method: Electronic medical records were obtained from general practices (primary care) in the United Kingdom. Dates of antibiotic prescription (AP) were compared with first date of FGID diagnosis and contrasted across three prevalent FGIDs and controls without gastrointestinal disorders.

Results: There were 10,926 GI healthy controls, 4326 IBS alone, 3477 FD alone, 340 chronic constipation and 4402 with overlap of multiple conditions. Both the prevalence of AP and rate were higher in FGID patients and increased with diagnosis of multiple FGIDs. 7%-14% of FGID patients were prescribed their first recorded antibiotic in the 12 months prior to their first FGID diagnosis and 20%-33% were prescribed an antibiotic in the same period. Differences between FGID groups were not accounted for by social deprivation and only rate of AP was moderated by social deprivation. In contrast, only 5%-10% of patients ever had a gastrointestinal infection recorded and only 1.5%-3.5% prior to their first FGID diagnosis.

Conclusion: These data indicate that antibiotics are prescribed prior to FGID diagnosis in a significant minority of care-seeking FGID patients, opening the potential for this medication to contribute to the pathophysiology. APs appears to mostly be for non-gastrointestinal conditions.

Keywords: antibiotics; dysbiosis; functional gastrointestinal disorders; gastrointestinal infection; social deprivation.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interests.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Distribution of number of antibiotic prescriptions per 5 years. The distribution of number of prescriptions via box plots in which the lower and upper boundaries of each box represent the 25th and 75th percentiles of the distribution of each patient group is described. The line in the middle of the box represents the 50th percentile (median) and values above the 75th percentile are represented by solid dots

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