Hubert Department of Global Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA.
Program in International and Community Nutrition, Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, CA.
J Nutr. 2018 Jan 1;148(1):86-93. doi: 10.1093/jn/nxx009.
Vitamin B-12 is an essential nutrient required for many functions including DNA synthesis, erythropoiesis, and brain development. If maternal milk vitamin B-12 concentrations are low, infants may face elevated risks of deficiency when exclusively breastfed.
We evaluated cross-sectional associations between infant serum vitamin B-12 concentrations and maternal milk vitamin B-12 concentrations at 1-6 mo postpartum among an unsupplemented population in rural western Kenya, and assessed biological demographic, and dietary characteristics associated with adequate infant serum vitamin B-12.
We modeled 1) infant serum vitamin B-12 using maternal milk vitamin B-12 concentration with linear regression; and 2) adequate (>220 pmol/L) infant serum vitamin B-12 using hypothesized biological, demographic, and dietary predictors with logistic regression. In both models, we used generalized estimating equations to account for correlated observations at the cluster-level.
The median (quartile 1, quartile 3) infant serum vitamin B-12 concentration was 276 pmol/L (193, 399 pmol/L) and approximately one-third of infants had serum vitamin B-12 ≤220 pmol/L, indicating that they were vitamin B-12 depleted or deficient. There was a positive correlation between maternal milk and infant serum vitamin B-12 (r = 0.36, P < 0.001) and in multivariable analyses, maternal milk vitamin B-12 concentration was significantly associated with infant serum vitamin B-12 adequacy (P-trend = 0.03).
Despite a high prevalence (90%) of maternal milk vitamin B-12 concentrations below the level used to establish the Adequate Intake (<310 pmol/L), there was a low prevalence of infant vitamin B-12 deficiency. We found few factors that were associated with infant vitamin B-12 adequacy in this population, including infant feeding practices, although maternal vitamin B-12 status was not measured. The contribution of maternal milk to infant vitamin B-12 status remains important to quantify across populations, given that maternal milk vitamin B-12 concentration is modifiable with supplementation. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01704105.
维生素 B-12 是一种必需的营养物质,对于许多功能都很重要,包括 DNA 合成、红细胞生成和大脑发育。如果母乳中的维生素 B-12 浓度较低,那么仅母乳喂养的婴儿可能面临更高的维生素 B-12 缺乏风险。
我们评估了肯尼亚西部农村地区未补充维生素的人群中,1-6 个月产后母亲母乳维生素 B-12 浓度与婴儿血清维生素 B-12 浓度之间的横断面关联,并评估了与婴儿血清维生素 B-12 充足(>220 pmol/L)相关的生物学、人口统计学和饮食特征。
我们采用线性回归模型对 1)婴儿血清维生素 B-12 与母亲母乳维生素 B-12 浓度进行建模;2)采用假设的生物学、人口统计学和饮食预测因素对充足(>220 pmol/L)婴儿血清维生素 B-12 进行逻辑回归建模。在这两个模型中,我们使用广义估计方程来解释群集层面上的相关性观察。
婴儿血清维生素 B-12 的中位数(四分位数 1,四分位数 3)为 276 pmol/L(193,399 pmol/L),约三分之一的婴儿血清维生素 B-12 浓度≤220 pmol/L,表明他们处于维生素 B-12 耗竭或缺乏状态。母亲母乳和婴儿血清维生素 B-12 之间存在正相关(r = 0.36,P < 0.001),在多变量分析中,母亲母乳维生素 B-12 浓度与婴儿血清维生素 B-12 充足性显著相关(P 趋势 = 0.03)。
尽管母乳维生素 B-12 浓度有 90%(90%)高于建立适当摄入量(<310 pmol/L)的水平,但婴儿维生素 B-12 缺乏的患病率仍然较低。在该人群中,我们发现很少有因素与婴儿维生素 B-12 充足性相关,包括婴儿喂养方式,尽管没有测量母亲的维生素 B-12 状况。鉴于母乳中维生素 B-12 浓度可通过补充来改变,因此量化母乳对婴儿维生素 B-12 状况的贡献仍然很重要。本试验在 clinicaltrials.gov 上注册为 NCT01704105。