Tumwine James K, Nankabirwa Victoria, Diallo Hama Abdoulaye, Engebretsen Ingunn Marie Stadskleiv, Ndeezi Grace, Bangirana Paul, Sanou Anselme Simeon, Kashala-Abotnes Espérance, Boivin Michael, Giordani Bruno, Elgen Irene Bircow, Holding Penny, Kakooza-Mwesige Angelina, Skylstad Vilde, Nalugya Joyce, Tylleskar Thorkild, Meda Nicolas
Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, School of Medicine, College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
Centre for Intervention Science in Maternal and Child Health (CISMAC), Centre for International health, Department of Global Public Health and Primary Health Care, Faculty of Medicine and Odontology, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
PLoS One. 2018 Feb 23;13(2):e0191001. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0191001. eCollection 2018.
The beneficial effects from exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) have been widely acknowledged. We assessed the effect of exclusive breastfeeding promotion by peer counsellors in Uganda and Burkina Faso, on cognitive abilities, social emotional development, school performance and linear growth among 5-8 years old children.
Children in the PROMISE EBF trial (2006-2008) were re-enrolled in the follow-up PROMISE Saving Brains (SB) study (2013-2015). Caretaker interviews captured sociodemographic characteristics and social emotional development using the parent version of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ). Overall cognition and working memory were assessed using the Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, second edition (KABC2), cognitive flexibility was measured with the Child Category Test (CCT), and attention with the Test of Variables of Attention (T.O.V.A), while school performance was measured by a standardized test on arithmetic and reading. Country-pooled, age adjusted z-scores from each of the above outcomes were entered into a linear regression model controlling for confounders.
The number of children re-enrolled in the intervention and control arms were: 274/396 (69.2%) and 256/369 (69.4%) in Uganda and 265/392 (67.6%) and 288/402 (71.6%) in Burkina Faso. Assessment of cognitive ability showed small and no significant differences, of which general cognition (z-scores, 95% CI) showed the largest mean difference: -0.17 (-0.40; 0.05). Social emotional symptoms were similar across arms. There were no differences in school performance or linear growth for age detected.
Peer promotion for exclusive breastfeeding in Burkina Faso and Uganda was not associated with differences at 5-8 years of age in a range of measures of child development: cognitive abilities, emotion-behaviour-social symptoms or linear growth. This study from sub Saharan Africa did not reconfirm findings elsewhere that have shown an association between exclusive breastfeeding and cognitive performance. This might be due to a number of methodological limitations inherent in the current study. For example since the majority of the children were breastfed, the benefits of the intervention could have been diluted. Other factors such as the mental and HIV status of the mothers (which were not assessed in the current study) could have affected our results. Hence regarding the effect of exclusive breastfeeding on measures of child neurocognitive development in sub Saharan Africa, the jury is still out.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01882335.
纯母乳喂养(EBF)的有益效果已得到广泛认可。我们评估了乌干达和布基纳法索同伴辅导员推广纯母乳喂养对5至8岁儿童认知能力、社会情感发展、学业成绩和线性生长的影响。
参与“PROMISE EBF试验”(2006 - 2008年)的儿童重新参与了后续的“PROMISE Saving Brains(SB)研究”(2013 - 2015年)。通过照顾者访谈,使用优势与困难问卷(SDQ)的家长版获取社会人口学特征和社会情感发展情况。使用考夫曼儿童评估量表第二版(KABC2)评估总体认知和工作记忆,用儿童类别测试(CCT)测量认知灵活性,用注意力变量测试(T.O.V.A)测量注意力,同时通过算术和阅读标准化测试衡量学业成绩。将上述各项结果的国家汇总、年龄调整后的z分数纳入控制混杂因素的线性回归模型。
乌干达干预组和对照组重新参与研究的儿童数量分别为:274/396(69.2%)和256/369(69.4%);布基纳法索为265/392(67.6%)和288/402(71.6%)。认知能力评估显示差异较小且无显著差异,其中总体认知(z分数,95%置信区间)的平均差异最大:-0.17(-0.40;0.05)。各研究组的社会情感症状相似。在学业成绩或年龄别线性生长方面未发现差异。
在布基纳法索和乌干达,同伴推广纯母乳喂养与5至8岁儿童在一系列发育指标上的差异无关:认知能力、情绪 - 行为 - 社会症状或线性生长。这项来自撒哈拉以南非洲的研究未再次证实其他地方所显示的纯母乳喂养与认知表现之间的关联。这可能是由于本研究存在一些固有的方法学局限性。例如,由于大多数儿童都进行了母乳喂养,干预的益处可能被稀释。其他因素,如母亲的心理和艾滋病毒感染状况(本研究未评估)可能影响了我们的结果。因此,关于纯母乳喂养对撒哈拉以南非洲儿童神经认知发育指标的影响,尚无定论。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01882335