Lassi Zohra S, Kurji Jaameeta, Oliveira Cristieli Sérgio de, Moin Anoosh, Bhutta Zulfiqar A
University of Adelaide, Robinson Research Institute, Adelaide, Australia, Australia.
University of Ottawa, School of Epidemiology and Public Health, Ottawa, Canada.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Apr 8;4(4):CD010205. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010205.pub2.
Zinc is a vital micronutrient for humans and is essential for protein synthesis, cell growth, and differentiation. Severe zinc deficiency can lead to slower physical, cognitive and sexual growth, cause skin disorders, decrease immunity, increase incidence of acute illnesses in infants and children and contribute to childhood stunting. By estimation, 17.3% of the world population is at risk of inadequate zinc intake. Such nutritional impairment increases the risk of diarrhoea and pneumonia by 20%, as well as leads to a global loss of more than 16 million disability-adjusted life years in children less than five years of age. Not only does zinc deficiency affect lives, it adds to the considerable financial burden on depleted resources in countries that are most affected. By preventing or curing this deficiency, we can improve childhood mortality, morbidity and growth.
To assess the effectiveness of zinc supplementation for the promotion of growth, reduction in mortality, and the prevention of infections in infants less than six months of age.
We used the standard search strategy of the Cochrane Neonatal Group to search the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL 2018, Issue 4), MEDLINE via PubMed (1966 to 18 May 2018), Embase (1980 to 18 May 2018), and CINAHL (1982 to 18 May 2018). We also searched clinical trials databases, conference proceedings, and the reference lists of retrieved articles for randomised controlled trials and quasi-randomised trials. An updated search from 1 January 2018 to 29 January 2020 was run in the following databases: CENTRAL via CRS Web, MEDLINE via Ovid, and CINAHL via EBSCOhost.
All randomised controlled (individual and cluster randomised) and quasi-randomised trials of zinc supplementation in healthy, term infants, less than six months of age comparing infant mortality, incidence of diarrhoea or respiratory illnesses, growth and/or serum zinc levels were eligible.
Two review authors screened search results (title and abstracts) and relevant full texts. Studies fulfilling prespecified inclusion criteria were included with any disagreements resolved by consensus. Extraction and analysis were then conducted. We used the GRADE approach to assess the quality of evidence as indicated by certainty in effect estimates.
Eight studies (with 85,629 infants) were included and five studies were meta-analysed, out of which four studies compared zinc with placebo, and one compared zinc plus riboflavin versus riboflavin. Certain growth outcomes after six months of intervention (Weight for Age Z-scores (WAZ) (standardised mean difference) (SMD) 0.16, 95% CI 0.03 to 0.29; three studies, n = 955; fixed-effect; heterogeneity Chi² P = 0.96); I² = 0%); change in WAZ (SMD 0.16, 95% CI 0.07 to 0.25; one study, n = 386; fixed-effect); (Weight-for-Length Z-score (WLZ) (SMD 0.15, 95% CI 0.02 to 0.28; three studies, n = 955; fixed-effect; heterogeneity: Chi² P = 0.81); I² = 0%); (change in WLZ (SMD 0.17, 95% CI 0.06 to 0.28; one study, n = 386; fixed-effect)) were positively affected by zinc supplementation compared to placebo. A single study reported no difference in the incidence of diarrhoea and lower respiratory tract infection with zinc supplementation. Zinc had no effect on mortality in children younger than 12 months. When zinc plus riboflavin was compared to riboflavin only, significant improvement was observed in the incidence of wasting at 24 months (risk ratio (RR) 0.59, 95% CI 0.37 to 0.96; one study, n = 296; fixed-effect), but significant worsening of incidence of stunting was present at 21 months (RR 1.53, 95% CI 1.09 to 2.16; one study, n = 298; fixed-effect).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There was a significant positive impact of zinc supplementation on WAZ and WLZ after six months of intervention in infants compared to placebo. When a combined supplement of zinc and riboflavin was compared to riboflavin, there was a significant reduction in wasting at 24 months, but stunting at 21 months was negatively affected. Although included trials were of good-to-moderate quality, evidence that could be meta-analysed was based on a few studies which affected the overall quality of results. Regardless, there is a need for strong trials conducted in infants younger than six months before a strong recommendation can be made supporting zinc supplementation in this age group.
锌是人体必需的微量营养素,对蛋白质合成、细胞生长和分化至关重要。严重缺锌会导致身体、认知和性发育迟缓,引发皮肤疾病,降低免疫力,增加婴幼儿急性疾病的发病率,并导致儿童发育迟缓。据估计,全球17.3%的人口有锌摄入不足的风险。这种营养损害使腹泻和肺炎的风险增加20%,还导致五岁以下儿童全球损失超过1600万个伤残调整生命年。缺锌不仅影响生活,还给受影响最严重国家本就匮乏的资源增加了巨大的经济负担。通过预防或治疗这种缺乏症,我们可以改善儿童死亡率、发病率和生长情况。
评估补充锌对促进六个月以下婴儿生长、降低死亡率和预防感染的有效性。
我们采用Cochrane新生儿组的标准检索策略,检索Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL 2018年第4期)、通过PubMed检索的MEDLINE(1966年至2018年5月18日)、Embase(1980年至2018年5月18日)和CINAHL(1982年至2018年5月18日)。我们还检索了临床试验数据库、会议论文集以及检索到的文章的参考文献列表,以查找随机对照试验和半随机试验。2018年1月1日至2020年1月29日在以下数据库进行了更新检索:通过CRS Web检索CENTRAL、通过Ovid检索MEDLINE、通过EBSCOhost检索CINAHL。
所有针对健康足月儿、六个月以下婴儿补充锌的随机对照(个体和整群随机)及半随机试验,比较婴儿死亡率、腹泻或呼吸道疾病发病率、生长情况和/或血清锌水平的均符合要求。
两位综述作者筛选检索结果(标题和摘要)以及相关全文。符合预先设定纳入标准的研究被纳入,任何分歧通过协商解决。然后进行提取和分析。我们采用GRADE方法评估证据质量,如效应估计的确定性所示。
纳入八项研究(共85629名婴儿),其中五项研究进行了荟萃分析,四项研究将锌与安慰剂比较,一项研究将锌加核黄素与核黄素比较。与安慰剂相比,干预六个月后的某些生长指标(年龄别体重Z评分(WAZ)(标准化均值差)(SMD)0.16,95%可信区间0.03至0.29;三项研究,n = 955;固定效应;异质性Chi²P = 0.96;I² = 0%);WAZ变化(SMD 0.16,95%可信区间0.07至0.25;一项研究,n = 386;固定效应);身长别体重Z评分(WLZ)(SMD 0.15,95%可信区间0.02至0.28;三项研究,n = 955;固定效应;异质性:Chi²P = 0.81;I² = 0%);(WLZ变化(SMD 0.17,95%可信区间0.06至0.28;一项研究,n = 386;固定效应))受到补充锌的积极影响。一项研究报告补充锌后腹泻和下呼吸道感染发病率无差异。锌对12个月以下儿童的死亡率无影响。当将锌加核黄素与仅核黄素比较时,观察到24个月时消瘦发病率有显著改善(风险比(RR)0.59,95%可信区间0.37至0.96;一项研究,n = 296;固定效应),但21个月时发育迟缓发病率有显著恶化(RR 1.53,95%可信区间1.09至2.16;一项研究,n = 298;固定效应)。
与安慰剂相比,对婴儿干预六个月后补充锌对WAZ和WLZ有显著的积极影响。当将锌和核黄素联合补充剂与核黄素比较时,24个月时消瘦显著减少,但21个月时发育迟缓受到负面影响。尽管纳入的试验质量为中等到良好,但可进行荟萃分析的证据基于少数研究,影响了结果的整体质量。无论如何,在能够强烈推荐该年龄组补充锌之前,需要对六个月以下婴儿进行强有力的试验。