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Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)

Background: Vitamin A deficiency continues to be a major public health problem affecting developing countries where people eat mostly rice as a staple food. In Asia, rice provides up to 80% of the total daily energy intake. Objective: We used existing data sets from Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Ph...

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Autores principales: De Moura, Fabiana F, Moursi, Mourad, Donahue Angel, Moira, Angeles-Agdeppa, Imelda, Atmarita, Atmarita, Gironella, Glen M, Muslimatun, Siti, Carriquiry, Alicia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Nutrition 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4997296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27510534
http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.115.129270
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author De Moura, Fabiana F
Moursi, Mourad
Donahue Angel, Moira
Angeles-Agdeppa, Imelda
Atmarita, Atmarita
Gironella, Glen M
Muslimatun, Siti
Carriquiry, Alicia
author_facet De Moura, Fabiana F
Moursi, Mourad
Donahue Angel, Moira
Angeles-Agdeppa, Imelda
Atmarita, Atmarita
Gironella, Glen M
Muslimatun, Siti
Carriquiry, Alicia
author_sort De Moura, Fabiana F
collection PubMed
description Background: Vitamin A deficiency continues to be a major public health problem affecting developing countries where people eat mostly rice as a staple food. In Asia, rice provides up to 80% of the total daily energy intake. Objective: We used existing data sets from Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines, where dietary intakes have been quantified at the individual level to 1) determine the rice and vitamin A intake in nonpregnant, nonlactating women of reproductive age and in nonbreastfed children 1–3 y old and 2) simulate the amount of change that could be achieved in the prevalence of inadequate intake of vitamin A if rice biofortified with β-carotene were consumed instead of the rice consumed at present. Design: We considered a range of 4–20 parts per million (ppm) of β-carotene content and 10–70% substitution levels for the biofortified rice. Software was used to estimate usual rice and vitamin A intake for the simulation analyses. Results: In an analysis by country, the substitution of biofortified rice for white rice in the optimistic scenario (20 ppm and 70% substitution) decreased the prevalence of vitamin A inadequacy from baseline 78% in women and 71% in children in Bangladesh. In Indonesia and the Philippines, the prevalence of inadequacy fell by 55–60% in women and dropped by nearly 30% in children from baseline. Conclusions: The results of the simulation analysis were striking in that even low substitution levels and modest increases in the β-carotene of rice produced a meaningful decrease in the prevalence of inadequate intake of vitamin A. Increasing the substitution levels had a greater impact than increasing the β-carotene content by >12 ppm.
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spelling pubmed-49972962016-09-07 Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1) De Moura, Fabiana F Moursi, Mourad Donahue Angel, Moira Angeles-Agdeppa, Imelda Atmarita, Atmarita Gironella, Glen M Muslimatun, Siti Carriquiry, Alicia Am J Clin Nutr Nutritional Epidemiology and Public Health Background: Vitamin A deficiency continues to be a major public health problem affecting developing countries where people eat mostly rice as a staple food. In Asia, rice provides up to 80% of the total daily energy intake. Objective: We used existing data sets from Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines, where dietary intakes have been quantified at the individual level to 1) determine the rice and vitamin A intake in nonpregnant, nonlactating women of reproductive age and in nonbreastfed children 1–3 y old and 2) simulate the amount of change that could be achieved in the prevalence of inadequate intake of vitamin A if rice biofortified with β-carotene were consumed instead of the rice consumed at present. Design: We considered a range of 4–20 parts per million (ppm) of β-carotene content and 10–70% substitution levels for the biofortified rice. Software was used to estimate usual rice and vitamin A intake for the simulation analyses. Results: In an analysis by country, the substitution of biofortified rice for white rice in the optimistic scenario (20 ppm and 70% substitution) decreased the prevalence of vitamin A inadequacy from baseline 78% in women and 71% in children in Bangladesh. In Indonesia and the Philippines, the prevalence of inadequacy fell by 55–60% in women and dropped by nearly 30% in children from baseline. Conclusions: The results of the simulation analysis were striking in that even low substitution levels and modest increases in the β-carotene of rice produced a meaningful decrease in the prevalence of inadequate intake of vitamin A. Increasing the substitution levels had a greater impact than increasing the β-carotene content by >12 ppm. American Society for Nutrition 2016-09 2016-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4997296/ /pubmed/27510534 http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.115.129270 Text en http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the CC-BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Nutritional Epidemiology and Public Health
De Moura, Fabiana F
Moursi, Mourad
Donahue Angel, Moira
Angeles-Agdeppa, Imelda
Atmarita, Atmarita
Gironella, Glen M
Muslimatun, Siti
Carriquiry, Alicia
Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)
title Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)
title_full Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)
title_fullStr Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)
title_full_unstemmed Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)
title_short Biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin A intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in Bangladesh, Indonesia, and the Philippines(1)
title_sort biofortified β-carotene rice improves vitamin a intake and reduces the prevalence of inadequacy among women and young children in a simulated analysis in bangladesh, indonesia, and the philippines(1)
topic Nutritional Epidemiology and Public Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4997296/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27510534
http://dx.doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.115.129270
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