Skip to content

The Effects of Antibiotic Exposure in Early Infancy on Vaccine Responses

The Effects of Antibiotic Exposure in Early Infancy on Vaccine Responses

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06079606
Enrollment
200
Registered
2023-10-12
Start date
2022-09-10
Completion date
2027-12-31
Last updated
2025-12-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Immune Responses, Antibiotic Treatment

Keywords

Antibiotics, Immune Responses, Vaccinations, Children, Rotavirus

Brief summary

This prospective cohort study will include 200 term children born in Landspitali University Hospital in Iceland. The cohort will be divided into four groups according to antibiotic exposure of which one is the control group. Children's immune responses to live oral rotavirus vaccine as well as conventional vaccinations given at three, five and 12 months old will be determined by measuring salivary and serologic responses. Responses will be compared between the four groups. Stool samples will also be collected from participants and the composition of the microbiome compared between the four groups.

Detailed description

This prospective cohort study will evaluate the development of the immune system by means of evaluating the immune responses to oral rotavirus vaccine and the scheduled childhood vaccinations in Iceland, at the age of three, five and 12 months, in four different groups of term children born in Iceland. The cohort will be divided into the following groups: * Group A: Term children born with elective caesarean section (their mothers received intra-operative antibiotics). * Group B: Term vaginally born children and their mothers received intra-partum antibiotics. * Group C: Term vaginally born children that received systemic antibiotics during the first week of life for at least 48 hours. * Group D: Term vaginally born children that had not received systemic antibiotics at the time of recruitment. Parents of children born with elective caesarean section in Landspitali or born vaginally and their mothers received intra-partum antibiotics as well as parents of children in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit receiving systemic antibiotics during the first week of life will be offered to take part in the study (Groups A, B and C). Parents of children coming to a five day old check up at the Children's Hospital in Landspitali will also be offered to take part in the study (Group D). Sample size calculations show that to detect a 30% difference in immune responses to vaccines with 80% power, 40 infants are needed for analysis in each group. To account for late exclusions due to antibiotic use or drop-out due to other reasons, 50 infants will be recruited to each group. Participants will receive vaccination with the oral live attenuated rotavirus vaccine, Rotarix, at six weeks old and again at three months old. Participants will receive vaccinations with Pentavac against diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis, haemophilus influenza type B and polio and Synflorix against pneumococci at their Health Care Centre according to scheduled childhood vaccinations in Iceland at three, five and 12 months old. Salivary and blood samples will be taken from participants just before the first vaccination with Rotarix at six weeks old and again at six months (four weeks after the second dose of Pentavac and Synflorix) and at 13 months old (four weeks after the third dose of Pentavac and Synflorix). Specific antibody levels against rotavirus, pertussis, diphtheria, tetanus, haemophilus influenzae type B, polio virus and pneumococci will be measured. Parents of participants will be given two stool sample kits and asked to take one from their child at six weeks old (before the first dose of rotavirus vaccine) and then another at three months old. In case of detection of differences in antibody response, these samples will be sent for microbiome analysis.

Interventions

Children will be assigned to groups according to antibiotic exposure in early life. No antibiotics will be given in the study.

Sponsors

Landspitali University Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Observational model
COHORT
Time perspective
PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
No minimum to 6 Weeks
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* All term children born in Iceland from 2022-2023

Exclusion criteria

* Children born with emergency caesarean section * Children born before 36 weeks of gestation * Children diagnosed with primary or secondary immunodeficiency * Use of immunosuppressive drugs at recruitment or during the follow up period (excluding inhaled corticosteroids and short term oral corticosteroids (\<3 consecutive days). * Children with chromosomal, genetic or other congenital diseases or abnormalities * Children with severe, chronic diseases or disabilities * Informed consent not signed by parents

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Serum antibody response to rotavirus2 yearsSerum IgA against rotavirus
Salivary antibody response to rotavirus2 yearsSalivary IgA levels against rotavirus
Serum antibody response to other microbes2 yearsSerum IgG against other microbes
Salivary antibody response to other microbes2 yearsSalivary IgG against other microbes

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Composition of the microbiome3 years16s rRNA analysis of stool microbiome

Countries

Iceland

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026