Researchers discover common origin behind major childhood allergies

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Several major childhood allergies may share a common link to the community of bacteria living in our gut, according to a new study led by researchers at BC Children’s Hospital and the University of British Columbia (UBC). 

The research, published in Nature Communications, identifies gut microbiome features and early life influences that are associated with children developing allergies by age five. The findings could lead to new methods of predicting whether a child will develop allergies, or even preventing them from developing at all.

“We’re seeing more and more children and families seeking help at the emergency department due to allergies,” says Dr. Stuart Turvey, an investigator at BC Children’s Hospital Research Institute and professor in the department of pediatrics at UBC, and co-senior author on the study. Hundreds of millions of children worldwide suffer from allergies, including one in three children in Canada, and it’s important to understand why this is happening and how it can be prevented.”

Hundreds of millions of children worldwide suffer from allergies, including one in three children in Canada, and it’s important to understand why this is happening and how it can be prevented.

– Dr. Stuart Turvey

The study is one of the first to examine four distinct school-aged pediatric allergies at once: atopic dermatitis (eczema), asthma, food allergy and allergic rhinitis (hay fever). While these allergic diseases often have unique symptoms, the Turvey lab was curious if they might have a common origin linked to the infant gut microbiota composition.

“These are technically different diagnoses, each with their own list of symptoms, so most researchers tend to study them individually,” says Dr. Charisse Petersen, co-senior author on the paper and a postdoctoral fellow in the Turvey lab. “But when you look at what is going wrong at a cellular level, they actually have a lot in common.”

For this study, the researchers examined clinical assessments from 1,115 children who were tracked from birth to age five. Roughly half of the children (523) had no evidence of allergies at any time, while more than half (592) had been diagnosed with one or more allergic disorders by an expert physician at the five-year scheduled visit. The researchers evaluated the participants’ microbiomes from stool samples collected at clinical visits at three months and one year.

The stool samples revealed a bacterial signature that was associated with children developing any of the four allergies by five years of age. The signature is a hallmark of dysbiosis, or an imbalanced gut microbiota, that likely resulted in reduced barrier integrity and an elevated inflammatory response within the gut.

“Typically, our bodies tolerate the millions of bacteria living in our guts because they do so many good things for our health. Some of the ways we tolerate them are by keeping a strong barrier between them and our immune cells and by limiting inflammatory signals that would call those immune cells into action,” says Courtney Hoskinson, a PhD candidate at UBC and first author on the paper. “We found a common breakdown in these mechanisms in babies prior to the development of allergies.”

Courtney Hoskinson, PhD candidate at UBC and first author on the paper, and Dr. Charisse Petersen, co-senior author on the paper and a postdoctoral fellow in the Turvey Lab.

Many factors can shape the infant gut microbiota, including diet, how we are born, where we live, and our exposure to antibiotics. For example, antibiotics may wipe out sensitive bacteria, while breastfeeding tends to replenish and provide necessary food for bacteria in the infant gut. The researchers examined how these types of influences affected the balance of gut microbiota and the development of allergies.

Developing therapies that change these interactions during infancy may therefore prevent the development of all sorts of allergic diseases in childhood, which often last a lifetime.

– Dr. Stuart Turvey

“There are a lot of potential insights from this robust analysis,” says Dr. Turvey. “From these data we can see that factors such as antibiotic usage in the first year of life are more likely to result in later allergic disorders, while breastfeeding for the first six months is protective. This was universal to all the allergic disorders we studied. Developing therapies that change these interactions during infancy may therefore prevent the development of all sorts of allergic diseases in childhood, which often last a lifetime.”

Now the researchers hope to leverage the findings to inform treatments that correct an imbalanced gut microbiota and could potentially prevent allergies from developing.

The research is part of the CHILD Cohort Study (CHILD) that recruited families through BC Children’s Hospital and BC Women’s Hospital + Health Centre and other pediatric hospitals across Canada. Since launching in 2008, the team of Canadian researchers has tracked the health, growth and environments of kids from birth to age five (and beyond) and made important discoveries about how asthma and allergies develop.

“CHILD is unique in allowing us to go back to see what biological changes in their infancy might have led to these diseases later on,” says Dr. Turvey. “This study provides insight into underappreciated and nuanced aspects of the infant microbiome that will enable improved prevention and prediction of allergic disease.”

This study was funded by Genome Canada and Genome British Columbia, as well as the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), BC Children’s Hospital Foundation, and the Provincial Health Services Authority. The CHILD Cohort Study was made possible through initial funding from the Allergy, Genes, and Environment Network of Centres of Excellence (AllerGen NCE) and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR).

Alan Worsley
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