| Literature DB >> 29198208 |
N Mackinnon1, S Zammit2, G Lewis3, P B Jones1, G M Khandaker1.
Abstract
A link between infection, inflammation, neurodevelopment and adult illnesses has been proposed. The objective of this study was to examine the association between infection burden during childhood - a critical period of development for the immune and nervous systems - and subsequent systemic inflammatory markers and general intelligence. In the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children, a prospective birth cohort in England, we examined the association of exposure to infections during childhood, assessed at seven follow-ups between age 1·5 and 7·5 years, with subsequent: (1) serum interleukin 6 and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels at age 9; (2) intelligence quotient (IQ) at age 8. We also examined the relationship between inflammatory markers and IQ. Very high infection burden (90+ percentile) was associated with higher CRP levels, but this relationship was explained by body mass index (adjusted odds ratio (OR) 1·19; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0·95-1·50), maternal occupation (adjusted OR 1·23; 95% CI 0·98-1·55) and atopic disorders (adjusted OR 1·24; 95% CI 0·98-1·55). Higher CRP levels were associated with lower IQ; adjusted β = -0·79 (95% CI -1·31 to -0·27); P = 0·003. There was no strong evidence for an association between infection and IQ. The findings indicate that childhood infections do not have an independent, lasting effect on circulating inflammatory marker levels subsequently in childhood; however, elevated inflammatory markers may be harmful for intellectual development/function.Entities:
Keywords: Birth cohort study; C-reactive protein; infection; inflammatory markers; intelligence quotient; interleukin 6
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29198208 PMCID: PMC5851035 DOI: 10.1017/S0950268817002710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Infect ISSN: 0950-2688 Impact factor: 2.451
Fig. 1.Timeline of data collection, associations tested and sample size.
Baseline characteristics of the study sample
| Group/characteristic | Low | Medium | High | Very high | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of infections (percentile of infection distribution) | 0–4 (0–49) | 5–6 (50–75) | 7–9 (76–90) | 10–22 (⩾90) | |
| Total participants, No. (%) | 6371 (54·1) | 2480 (21·0) | 1988 (16·9) | 947 (8·0) | |
| BMI, mean ( | 17·2 (2·9) | 17·1 (2·8) | 17·3 (2·8) | 17·3 (2·8) | 0·019 |
| Sex (male), No. (%) | 3359 (52·7) | 1262 (50·9) | 991 (49·8) | 464 (49·0) | 0·033 |
| Maternal occupation (manual), No. (%) | 1018 (21·8) | 349 (17·0) | 241 (14·5) | 144 (17·9) | <0·001 |
| Atopy, No (%) | <0·001 | ||||
| Has asthma | 362 (12·0) | 252 (13·5) | 288 (18·0) | 144 (18·3) | |
| Has eczema | 361 (12·0) | 246 (13·2) | 205 (12·8) | 109 (13·8) | |
| Has both | 127 (4·2) | 117 (6·3) | 155 (9·7) | 125 (15·9) | |
| Has neither | 2170 (71·8) | 1247 (67·0) | 950 (59·4) | 409 (52·0) | |
| Household crowding, mean ( | 2·2 (1·1) | 2·0 (1·0) | 1·9 (1·0) | 2·0 (1·0) | <0·001 |
*P-values correspond to the Pearson's χ2 test for sex, atopic disorder and maternal occupation, and for an ANOVA test for BMI and house crowding.
Odds ratio (OR) for high serum IL-6 and CRP levels at age 9 years for infection burden between age 1·5 and 7·5 years
| Inflammatory marker | Infection burden between 1·5 and 7·5 years (no. of infections) | Sample size, no. | In top third of inflammatory marker distributions | OR (95% CI) for being in the top third of inflammatory marker distribution at 9 years | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-6 | Unadjusted | Adjusted | |||
| Low (0–4) | 1970 | 626 (31·78) | 1·00 (reference) | 1·00 (reference) | |
| Medium (5–6) | 1204 | 402 (33·39) | 1·08 (0·92–1·25) | 1·07 (0·88–1·29) | |
| High (7–9) | 963 | 315 (32·71) | 1·04 (0·88–1·23) | 0·98 (0·80–1·20) | |
| Very high (10–22) | 489 | 183 (37·42) | 1·28 (1·04–1·58) | 1·13 (0·88–1·47) | |
| CRP | |||||
| Low (0–4) | 1973 | 615 (31·17) | 1·00 (reference) | 1·00 (reference) | |
| Medium (5–6) | 1206 | 417 (34·58) | 1·17 (1·00–1·36) | 1·21 (0·99–1·49) | |
| High (7–9) | 967 | 322 (33·30) | 1·10 (0·94–1·30) | 1·06 (0·85–1·31) | |
| Very high (10–22) | 490 | 179 (36·53) | 1·27 (1·03–1·56) | 1·02 (0·77–1·34) | |
Adjusted for sex, BMI, maternal occupation, atopic disorder and household crowding.
Association between infection burden between 1·5 and 7·5 years and total IQ score at age 8 years
| Unadjusted analysis | Adjusted analysis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sample | ΔIQ per infection (95% CI) | Sample | ΔIQ per infection (95% CI) | ||
| 6762 | 0·41 (0·28–0·54) | <0·001 | 4392 | 0·22 (0·07–0·37) | 0·008 |
Adjusted for sex, BMI, maternal occupation, atopic disorder and household crowding.
Association between serum IL-6 and CRP levels and total IQ score
| Inflammatory marker | Unadjusted analysis | Adjusted analysis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ΔIQ per 1 pg/ml (IL-6) or mg/L (CRP) (95% CI) | ΔIQ per 1 pg/ml (IL-6) or mg/L (CRP) (95% CI) | |||||
| IL-6 | 4243 | −0·80 (−1·37 to −0·24) | 0·005 | 2960 | −0·26 (−0·93 to 0·41) | 0·446 |
| CRP | 4253 | −0·89 (−1·30 to −0·49) | <0·001 | 2967 | −0·79 (−1·31 to −0·27) | 0·003 |
Adjusted for sex, BMI, maternal occupation, atopic disorder and household crowding.