Prado Elizabeth L, Phuka John, Maleta Kenneth, Ashorn Per, Ashorn Ulla, Vosti Steve A, Dewey Kathryn G
Program in International and Community Nutrition, Department of Nutrition, University of California Davis, 3253 Meyer Hall, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
School of Public Health and Family Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Malawi, Blantyre, Malawi.
Matern Child Health J. 2016 Oct;20(10):2199-208. doi: 10.1007/s10995-016-2061-6.
Objectives Undernutrition during early life contributes to more than 200 million children globally not fulfilling their developmental potential. Our objective was to determine whether dietary supplementation with several formulations of lipid-based nutrient supplements (LNS), which differed in dose per day and milk content, positively affect infant development in Malawi. Methods We randomly assigned 1932 infants age 6 months to receive one of the following for 12 months: 10, 20 g, or 40 g/day milk-containing LNS, 20 g or 40 g/day milk-free LNS, or no supplement until 18 months of age (control group). We assessed motor, language, socio-emotional, and executive function at age 18 months. Primary analysis was by intention-to-treat and we also examined 13 potential effect modifiers, including the child's initial nutritional status and level of developmental stimulation. The study is registered as clinical trial NCT00945698. Results We found no significant differences between intervention groups in any scores. The difference in mean z-scores between children in the control group and children in the intervention groups ranged from -0.08 to 0.04 for motor development (p = 0.76), -0.05 to 0.01 for language development (p = 0.97), -0.15 to 0.11 for socio-emotional development (p = 0.22), and -0.02 to 0.20 for executive function (p = 0.24). We did not find that initial nutritional status, developmental stimulation, or other factors modified the effect LNS versus control group. Conclusions for Practice Our results suggest that in a population such as this one, provision of LNS from age 6 to 18 months would not affect motor, language, socio-emotional, or executive function skills at age 18 months.
目标 全球超过2亿儿童因生命早期营养不良而无法充分发挥其发育潜力。我们的目标是确定每天剂量和牛奶含量不同的几种基于脂质的营养补充剂(LNS)配方进行膳食补充是否会对马拉维婴儿的发育产生积极影响。方法 我们将1932名6个月大的婴儿随机分配,让他们在12个月内接受以下其中一种处理:每天10克、20克或40克含牛奶的LNS,每天20克或40克不含牛奶的LNS,或直到18个月龄都不进行补充(对照组)。我们在18个月龄时评估运动、语言、社会情感和执行功能。主要分析采用意向性分析,我们还研究了13个潜在的效应修饰因素,包括儿童的初始营养状况和发育刺激水平。该研究已注册为临床试验NCT00945698。结果 我们发现干预组之间在任何得分上均无显著差异。对照组儿童与干预组儿童之间运动发育的平均z分数差异为-0.08至0.04(p = 0.76),语言发育为-0.05至0.01(p = 0.97),社会情感发育为-0.15至0.11(p = 0.22),执行功能为-0.02至0.20(p = 0.24)。我们没有发现初始营养状况、发育刺激或其他因素会改变LNS组与对照组之间的效应。实践结论 我们的结果表明,在这样的人群中,从6个月至18个月龄提供LNS不会影响18个月龄时的运动、语言、社会情感或执行功能技能。