Coutsoudis A, Adhikari M, Pillay K, Kuhn L, Coovadia H M
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of Natal, Durban.
S Afr Med J. 2000 Jul;90(7):730-6.
Low-birth-weight (LBW) infants (< 2,500 g) are at increased risk of respiratory infection in the first few months of life and have low liver stores of vitamin A. As retinol is essential for respiratory epithelial cell differentiation, deficiency could result in pathological changes in the respiratory epithelium, with respiratory problems.
A randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to investigate the effect of vitamin A supplementation on the incidence and severity of respiratory infections in LBW infants during their first year of life.
One hundred and thirty LBW infants (gestational age < 36 weeks and birth weight 950-1,700 g) were enrolled in the study. The infants were randomly allocated to a vitamin A or placebo group. Infants in the vitamin A group received 25,000 IU of vitamin A (retinyl palmitate, Arovit drops, Roche, Basle, Switzerland) on study days 1, 4 and 8. Study day 1 was between 36 and 60 hours after delivery. Infants in the placebo group received a placebo (formulated by Roche) with a similar appearance and packed in the same dropper bottles as the vitamin A drops.
Vitamin A supplementation markedly improved serum retinol levels. After the last vitamin A dose, the vitamin A group had higher mean serum retinol concentrations than the placebo group (45.77 +/- 17.07 micrograms/dl v. 12.88 +/- 6.48 micrograms/dl, P = 0.0001). There was no evidence of improvement in neonatal or post-neonatal respiratory problems associated with vitamin A supplementation. Vitamin A and placebo groups did not differ in the occurrence or duration of respiratory distress or the need for head-box oxygen. There were also no significant differences in the cumulative probability of developing lower or upper respiratory tract infection through the first year of life. There was a slight suggestion of an increase in the risk of hospitalisation with pneumonia associated with vitamin A supplementation. The cumulative probability of being hospitalised with pneumonia by 6 months of age was 24.6% (7 hospitalisations) in the vitamin A group compared with 7.4% (2 hospitalisations) in the placebo group (log rank test P = 0.04). After adjusting for risk factors this difference was no longer significant.
Vitamin A supplementation in LBW neonates may not reduce incidence or severity of respiratory infections. These results do not negate the importance of improving vitamin A status in children as an important public health measure to reduce morbidity and mortality from other childhood infections.
低出生体重(LBW)婴儿(<2500克)在出生后的头几个月发生呼吸道感染的风险增加,且肝脏中维生素A储备较低。由于视黄醇对呼吸道上皮细胞分化至关重要,缺乏可能导致呼吸道上皮发生病理变化,进而引发呼吸问题。
进行一项随机、双盲、安慰剂对照试验,以研究补充维生素A对低出生体重婴儿出生后第一年呼吸道感染的发病率和严重程度的影响。
130名低出生体重婴儿(胎龄<36周,出生体重950 - 1700克)纳入研究。这些婴儿被随机分配到维生素A组或安慰剂组。维生素A组的婴儿在研究第1天、第4天和第8天接受25000国际单位的维生素A(棕榈酸视黄酯,阿罗维特滴剂,罗氏公司,瑞士巴塞尔)。研究第1天在分娩后36至60小时之间。安慰剂组的婴儿接受外观相似、装在与维生素A滴剂相同滴管瓶中的安慰剂(由罗氏公司配制)。
补充维生素A显著提高了血清视黄醇水平。在最后一剂维生素A后,维生素A组的平均血清视黄醇浓度高于安慰剂组(45.77±17.07微克/分升对12.88±6.48微克/分升,P = 0.0001)。没有证据表明补充维生素A能改善新生儿或新生儿后期的呼吸问题。维生素A组和安慰剂组在呼吸窘迫的发生或持续时间以及使用头罩吸氧需求方面没有差异。在出生后第一年发生下呼吸道或上呼吸道感染的累积概率也没有显著差异。有轻微迹象表明补充维生素A会增加患肺炎住院的风险。维生素A组6个月龄时因肺炎住院的累积概率为24.6%(7例住院),而安慰剂组为7.4%(2例住院)(对数秩检验P = 0.04)。在调整风险因素后,这种差异不再显著。
对低出生体重新生儿补充维生素A可能不会降低呼吸道感染的发病率或严重程度。这些结果并不否定改善儿童维生素A状况作为一项重要公共卫生措施以降低其他儿童感染所致发病率和死亡率的重要性。