Shahab-Ferdows Setareh, Engle-Stone Reina, Hampel Daniela, Ndjebayi Alex O, Nankap Martin, Brown Kenneth H, Allen Lindsay H
USDA, Agricultural Research Service Western Human Nutrition Research Center, Davis, CA;
Program in International and Community Nutrition, Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA; and.
J Nutr. 2015 Nov;145(11):2587-95. doi: 10.3945/jn.115.210195. Epub 2015 Oct 7.
Representative data on folate and vitamin B-12 dietary intake and status in low-income countries are rare, despite the widespread adoption of folic acid fortification.
The purpose of this study was to evaluate folate and vitamin B-12 intake, status, and risk factors for deficiency before implementation of a national fortification program in Cameroon.
A nationally representative cross-sectional cluster survey was conducted in 3 ecologic zones of Cameroon (South, North, and the 2 largest cities, Yaoundé/Douala), and information on dietary intake was collected from 10 households in each of 30 randomly selected clusters per zone. In a subset of women and their 12- to 59-mo-old children (n = 396 pairs), plasma folate and vitamin B-12, as well as breast milk vitamin B-12, were analyzed.
Vitamin B-12 and folate dietary intake patterns and plasma concentrations were similar for women and children. In the subsample, 18% and 29% of women and 8% and 30% of children were vitamin B-12 (≤ 221 pmol/L) and folate (< 10 nmol/L) deficient, respectively. Mean dietary folate ranged from 351 μg dietary folate equivalents/d in the North to 246 μg dietary folate equivalents/d in Yaoundé/Douala; plasma folate was negatively associated with socioeconomic status (P = 0.001). Plasma vitamin B-12 deficiency was similar in the South and North, 29% and 40%, respectively, but was only 11% in Yaoundé/Douala, and was positively associated with socioeconomic status. Mean breast milk vitamin B-12 was statistically significantly lower in the North (101 pmol/L) than in the South (296 pmol/L) or Yaoundé/Douala (349 pmol/L).
Folate intake and status are inadequate among women and young children in Yaoundé/Douala, whereas low vitamin B-12 intake and status are more common in poor and rural areas, especially in the North. Different strategies may be needed to control deficiency of these nutrients in different regions of Cameroon.
尽管叶酸强化已广泛采用,但低收入国家关于叶酸和维生素B-12膳食摄入量及状况的代表性数据很少。
本研究的目的是在喀麦隆实施国家强化计划之前,评估叶酸和维生素B-12的摄入量、状况及缺乏的风险因素。
在喀麦隆的3个生态区(南部、北部以及两个最大城市雅温得/杜阿拉)进行了一项具有全国代表性的横断面整群调查,从每个区随机选取的30个整群中,每个整群的10户家庭收集膳食摄入信息。在一部分妇女及其12至59月龄的儿童(n = 396对)中,分析了血浆叶酸和维生素B-12以及母乳中的维生素B-12。
妇女和儿童的维生素B-12和叶酸膳食摄入模式及血浆浓度相似。在子样本中,分别有18%和29%的妇女以及8%和3%的儿童维生素B-12(≤221 pmol/L)和叶酸(<10 nmol/L)缺乏。膳食叶酸平均摄入量从北部的351μg膳食叶酸当量/天到雅温得/杜阿拉的246μg膳食叶酸当量/天不等;血浆叶酸与社会经济地位呈负相关(P = 0.001)。南部和北部血浆维生素B-12缺乏情况相似,分别为29%和40%,但在雅温得/杜阿拉仅为11%,且与社会经济地位呈正相关。北部母乳中维生素B-1(101 pmol/L)在统计学上显著低于南部(296 pmol/L)或雅温得/杜阿拉(349 pmol/L)。
雅温得/杜阿拉的妇女和幼儿叶酸摄入量和状况不足,而维生素B-12摄入量低和状况不佳在贫困和农村地区更为常见,尤其是在北部。喀麦隆不同地区可能需要不同的策略来控制这些营养素的缺乏。