Seven-Year Case-Control Study in California of Risk Factors for Infant Botulism - 20/11/20

Abstract |
Objective |
To ascertain possible risk factors for infant botulism, the intestinal infectious form of human botulism, in the years immediately following its initial recognition in California in 1976.
Study design |
Parents of 159 California laboratory-confirmed cases of infant botulism from 1976 to 1983 and 318 healthy controls were interviewed using a comprehensive (>300 factors) questionnaire. “Neighborhood controls” (n = 184) were matched on date of birth, sex, race/ethnicity, and neighborhood of residence. “County controls” (n = 134) were matched only on date of birth, sex, and county of residence. Age-stratified bivariate and multivariate conditional logistic regression analyses were performed using SAS.
Results |
All cases required hospitalization. Bivariate analyses identified several risk factors that in multivariate analyses were not significant. In multivariate analyses, risk factors differed with stratification by age. For the ≤2 month-old neighborhood controls comparison, birth order >1, cesarean delivery, ≤1 bowel movements (BMs) per day, and windy residence area were associated with illness hospitalization, and for the county controls comparison, only pacifier use was associated. For the <2 month-old neighborhood controls comparison, <1 bowel movements (BMs) per day, cesarean delivery, birth order >1, and windy residence area were associated with illness hospitalization, and for the county controls comparison, pets in the home was an additional risk factor.
Conclusions |
With the exception of the ≤2-month-old county controls group, slower intestinal transit time (≤1 BM/d) was associated with illness. Otherwise, our case–control investigation identified few physiologic, environmental, and maternal factors associated with infant botulism hospitalization in California.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Clostridium botulinum, botulinum toxin, multivariate analysis, pediatric infections, constipation, breastfeeding, formula feeding, birth order
Abbreviations : BM, BoNT, CDPH
Plan
| Supported in part by the California Department of Public Health and in part by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (HD 12530, AI 16354, and HD 14548). The federal study sponsors had no role in study design; data collection; interpretation and analysis; report writing; and submission decision. The authors declare no conflicts of interest. |
Vol 227
P. 258 - décembre 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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