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Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa

BACKGROUND: The efficacy of zinc combined with vitamin A or multiple micronutrients in preventing diarrhoea is unclear in African countries with high prevalence of HIV-exposed children. Potential modifying factors such as stunting need addressing. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether adding zinc, or zinc...

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Autores principales: Chhagan, Meera K, Van den Broeck, Jan, Luabeya, Kany-Kany Angelique, Mpontshane, Nontobeko, Tucker, Katherine L, Bennish, Michael L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2705811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19174830
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2008.78
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author Chhagan, Meera K
Van den Broeck, Jan
Luabeya, Kany-Kany Angelique
Mpontshane, Nontobeko
Tucker, Katherine L
Bennish, Michael L
author_facet Chhagan, Meera K
Van den Broeck, Jan
Luabeya, Kany-Kany Angelique
Mpontshane, Nontobeko
Tucker, Katherine L
Bennish, Michael L
author_sort Chhagan, Meera K
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The efficacy of zinc combined with vitamin A or multiple micronutrients in preventing diarrhoea is unclear in African countries with high prevalence of HIV-exposed children. Potential modifying factors such as stunting need addressing. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether adding zinc, or zinc plus multiple micronutrients, to vitamin A reduces diarrhoea incidence, and whether this differs between strata of stunted or HIV-infected children. METHODS: We analyzed data from a randomized, controlled double-blinded trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00156832) of prophylactic micronutrient supplementation to children aged 6–24 months. Three cohorts of children: 32 HIV-infected children, 154 HIV-uninfected children born to HIV-infected mothers, and 187 uninfected children born to HIV-uninfected mothers, received vitamin A, vitamin A plus zinc, or multiple micronutrients that included vitamin A and zinc. The main outcome was incidence of diarrhoea. Poisson regression was used in intent-to-treat analyses. Stratified analyses followed testing for statistical interaction between intervention and stunting. RESULTS: We observed no significant differences in overall diarrhoea incidence among treatment arms. Stunting modified this effect with stunted HIV-uninfected children having significantly lower diarrhoea incidence if supplemented with zinc or multiple micronutrients compared to vitamin A alone (2.04 and 2.23 vs 3.92 episodes/year respectively, P=0.024). No meaningful sub-group analyses could be done in the cohort of HIV-infected children. CONCLUSION: Compared with vitamin A alone, supplementation with zinc, and with zinc and multiple micronutrients, reduced diarrhoea morbidity in stunted rural South African children. Efficacy of zinc supplementation in HIV-infected children needs confirmation in studies that represent the spectrum of disease severity and age groups.
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spelling pubmed-27058112010-01-01 Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa Chhagan, Meera K Van den Broeck, Jan Luabeya, Kany-Kany Angelique Mpontshane, Nontobeko Tucker, Katherine L Bennish, Michael L Eur J Clin Nutr Article BACKGROUND: The efficacy of zinc combined with vitamin A or multiple micronutrients in preventing diarrhoea is unclear in African countries with high prevalence of HIV-exposed children. Potential modifying factors such as stunting need addressing. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether adding zinc, or zinc plus multiple micronutrients, to vitamin A reduces diarrhoea incidence, and whether this differs between strata of stunted or HIV-infected children. METHODS: We analyzed data from a randomized, controlled double-blinded trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00156832) of prophylactic micronutrient supplementation to children aged 6–24 months. Three cohorts of children: 32 HIV-infected children, 154 HIV-uninfected children born to HIV-infected mothers, and 187 uninfected children born to HIV-uninfected mothers, received vitamin A, vitamin A plus zinc, or multiple micronutrients that included vitamin A and zinc. The main outcome was incidence of diarrhoea. Poisson regression was used in intent-to-treat analyses. Stratified analyses followed testing for statistical interaction between intervention and stunting. RESULTS: We observed no significant differences in overall diarrhoea incidence among treatment arms. Stunting modified this effect with stunted HIV-uninfected children having significantly lower diarrhoea incidence if supplemented with zinc or multiple micronutrients compared to vitamin A alone (2.04 and 2.23 vs 3.92 episodes/year respectively, P=0.024). No meaningful sub-group analyses could be done in the cohort of HIV-infected children. CONCLUSION: Compared with vitamin A alone, supplementation with zinc, and with zinc and multiple micronutrients, reduced diarrhoea morbidity in stunted rural South African children. Efficacy of zinc supplementation in HIV-infected children needs confirmation in studies that represent the spectrum of disease severity and age groups. 2009-01-28 2009-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2705811/ /pubmed/19174830 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2008.78 Text en http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Chhagan, Meera K
Van den Broeck, Jan
Luabeya, Kany-Kany Angelique
Mpontshane, Nontobeko
Tucker, Katherine L
Bennish, Michael L
Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa
title Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa
title_full Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa
title_fullStr Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa
title_short Effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural South Africa
title_sort effect of micronutrient supplementation on diarrhoeal disease among stunted children in rural south africa
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2705811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19174830
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejcn.2008.78
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