Seven-Year Case-Control Study in California of Risk Factors for Infant Botulism.

The Journal of pediatrics 2020 Vol.227() p. 258-267.e8

Panditrao MV, Dabritz HA, Kazerouni NN, Damus KH, Meissinger JK, Arnon SS

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.

MeSH Terms

Botulism; California; Case-Control Studies; Epidemiologic Studies; Female; Humans; Infant; Infant, Newborn; Male; Risk Factors; Time Factors