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The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia

Background Malnutrition and pneumonia contribute significantly to under-5 mortality. The gut microbiome is associated with development of malnutrition and pneumonia. However, data on longitudinal growth, infant feeding practices, and the microbiome in children with malnutrition and pneumonia in low...

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Main Author: Budree, Shrish
Other Authors: Zar, Heather
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Paediatrics and Child Health 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Budree, Shrish
author2 Zar, Heather
author_browse Budree, Shrish
Zar, Heather
author_facet Zar, Heather
Budree, Shrish
author_sort Budree, Shrish
collection Thesis
description Background Malnutrition and pneumonia contribute significantly to under-5 mortality. The gut microbiome is associated with development of malnutrition and pneumonia. However, data on longitudinal growth, infant feeding practices, and the microbiome in children with malnutrition and pneumonia in low and middle-income countries (LMIC) are scarce. This work aimed to investigate growth in early childhood, and associations of the microbiome with growth and pneumonia in an LMIC. Methods A prospective study of growth, pneumonia, and the microbiome was performed in the Drakenstein Child Health Study (DCHS), a birth cohort in a low-income setting in South Africa. Mothers enrolled antenatally, and mother-child pairs were followed through birth and early childhood. Comprehensive health, socio-demographic, nutritional, and psychosocial data were collected longitudinally from birth through 3 years. Anthropometry was measured by trained study staff. Dietary information was collected using food-frequency questionnaires. Active surveillance for World Health Organization (WHO)-defined pneumonia was undertaken. Longitudinal stool samples were collected at study visits and during pneumonia episodes. WHO z-scores were calculated, and malnutrition classified as stunted, wasted, or overweight/obese. Dietary data were analysed using WHO infant and young child feeding indicators. Microbiome 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene amplicon sequencing was performed and bioinformatic analysis conducted in QIIME2 and Phyloseq (R packages). Results Subsets of children in the DCHS were analysed. Growth analysis among 792 infants (50% female; 15% preterm) showed that birth weight was a significant determinant of growth (p<0.001). Stunting was highly prevalent (17% and 13% at 2 and 12 months, respectively). Feeding practices evaluated in 1076 infants (50% female, 17% preterm) showed low exclusive breastfeeding rates (13%), and high consumption of inappropriate foods (high sugar or high-fat food) at 1 year (91%). Microbiome analysis of 138 children aged 1–40 months (49% females) included 90 children with pneumonia (10% hospitalised) and 48 non-pneumonia controls. Stunted children had low diversity (p=0.009) and significant depletion in Ruminococcus (q=0.03). Compared with age-matched controls, dysbiosis was found during pneumonia episodes and before the onset of pneumonia, characterised by significant enrichment in (Escherichia coli) E. coli (q=0.04). 6 Conclusion Malnutrition and poor infant feeding practices were highly prevalent despite strong primary healthcare programs. Correction of microbiome disruption may improve outcomes in pneumonia and malnutrition.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/42107 The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia Budree, Shrish Zar, Heather Nicol, Mark Malnutrition Pneumonia Gut Microbiome Infant Feeding Practices Stunting Dysbiosis Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC) Background Malnutrition and pneumonia contribute significantly to under-5 mortality. The gut microbiome is associated with development of malnutrition and pneumonia. However, data on longitudinal growth, infant feeding practices, and the microbiome in children with malnutrition and pneumonia in low and middle-income countries (LMIC) are scarce. This work aimed to investigate growth in early childhood, and associations of the microbiome with growth and pneumonia in an LMIC. Methods A prospective study of growth, pneumonia, and the microbiome was performed in the Drakenstein Child Health Study (DCHS), a birth cohort in a low-income setting in South Africa. Mothers enrolled antenatally, and mother-child pairs were followed through birth and early childhood. Comprehensive health, socio-demographic, nutritional, and psychosocial data were collected longitudinally from birth through 3 years. Anthropometry was measured by trained study staff. Dietary information was collected using food-frequency questionnaires. Active surveillance for World Health Organization (WHO)-defined pneumonia was undertaken. Longitudinal stool samples were collected at study visits and during pneumonia episodes. WHO z-scores were calculated, and malnutrition classified as stunted, wasted, or overweight/obese. Dietary data were analysed using WHO infant and young child feeding indicators. Microbiome 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene amplicon sequencing was performed and bioinformatic analysis conducted in QIIME2 and Phyloseq (R packages). Results Subsets of children in the DCHS were analysed. Growth analysis among 792 infants (50% female; 15% preterm) showed that birth weight was a significant determinant of growth (p<0.001). Stunting was highly prevalent (17% and 13% at 2 and 12 months, respectively). Feeding practices evaluated in 1076 infants (50% female, 17% preterm) showed low exclusive breastfeeding rates (13%), and high consumption of inappropriate foods (high sugar or high-fat food) at 1 year (91%). Microbiome analysis of 138 children aged 1–40 months (49% females) included 90 children with pneumonia (10% hospitalised) and 48 non-pneumonia controls. Stunted children had low diversity (p=0.009) and significant depletion in Ruminococcus (q=0.03). Compared with age-matched controls, dysbiosis was found during pneumonia episodes and before the onset of pneumonia, characterised by significant enrichment in (Escherichia coli) E. coli (q=0.04). 6 Conclusion Malnutrition and poor infant feeding practices were highly prevalent despite strong primary healthcare programs. Correction of microbiome disruption may improve outcomes in pneumonia and malnutrition. 2025-11-04T11:44:02Z 2025-11-04T11:44:02Z 2025 2025-11-04T11:06:12Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42107 en eng application/pdf Department of Paediatrics and Child Health Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Malnutrition
Pneumonia
Gut Microbiome
Infant Feeding Practices
Stunting
Dysbiosis
Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC)
Budree, Shrish
The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
title_full The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
title_fullStr The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
title_full_unstemmed The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
title_short The association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
title_sort association of early childhood nutrition and growth with the intestinal microbiome and pneumonia
topic Malnutrition
Pneumonia
Gut Microbiome
Infant Feeding Practices
Stunting
Dysbiosis
Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC)
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/42107
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