By monitoring the stool microbiome of hospitalized pre-mature newborns, the researchers also found important changes that appeared before episodes of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), an intestinal inflammation in which portions of the intestine undergo necrosis. Citrobacter koseri bacteria, which can cause meningitis, and Klebsiella pneumoniae, linked to hospital infections, were identified in greater numbers. They also found a low diversity of microorganisms and an abundance of Lactobacillus during the first days of life, as well as changes in microbial community interactions. These features were related to a higher risk of NEC in premature babies.
The results corroborate what another researcher funded by Grand Challenges Brazil, José Simon, has found in his research on the impacts of powdered human milk as compared to the use of formula.
The team will use the collected material for a second phase of analysis. The idea now is to investigate what factors in the maternal microbiome may be related to the development of necrotizing enterecolitis in babies. “We are also going to evaluate the relationship between maternal and neonatal microbiota and the onset of pre-eclampsia, a disease in which the pregnant woman develops hypertension,” say the researchers.