Anaemia Clinical Trial
1. Burden: Anaemia is a public health problem in our country. Fifty one percent young
children aged 6 to 59 months are suffering from anaemia in Bangladesh (BDHS-2011) and
the main cause of this problem is iron deficiency. Research findings show that Iron
deficiency leads to delayed development and even reduce working capacity. All these
impact negatively on quality of life and loss of national gross domestic product (GDP).
2. Knowledge gap: Little is known about long-term effects of early life iron deficiency
anemia on development and behaviour of children after correction with iron supplements.
There is also scarcity of information if early life psychosocial stimulation added to
iron supplementation to these anemic children have long term benefits compared to
non-stimulated anaemic children or non-anaemic children
3. Relevance:
The aim was to conduct a follow up study to examine whether the IDA children, who
recovered from iron deficiency and received additional more intense psychosocial
intervention catch up to their optimum development in later life at school age, similar
like non-anaemic peers.
4. Hypothesis (if any):
1. The benefit of early iron supplementation in addition to Psychosocial stimulation
on growth and development of IDA infants appears in later life.
2. Addition of early psychosocial stimulation in treated IDA children help them catch
up to their non-anemic peers in development over time.
5. Study Objective(s)
1. To determine the long term effect of early psychosocial stimulation provided at
the age of 6-24 months in addition to iron treatment in IDA children on their
growth (height, weight and Head Circumference), IQ, executive function, school
achievement, fine motor, memory and behaviour
2. To compare the growth and development of IDA infants with non-anemic infants after
7 years of an intervention with iron supplementation and psychosocial stimulation.
6. Methods:
Sample: All children who participated in the iron and stimulation study at the age of 6 to
24 months (n=424).
Identification of sample: Using the addresses and by tracking through available mobile phone
numbers.
Measurements
In the current follow-up, at the age of around 8-9 years all the available children will be
measured for:
- WASI: The Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence - Second Edition (WASI-II)
- School achievement
- Number Stroop
- SDQ (strength and difficulties):The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)
- Memory test of NEPSY (neuropsychological test)
- Digit span forward and backward
- Middle childhood HOME
- Fine motor skills using the Purdue peg board or Movement Assessment Battery Children- 2
(age -band 2 for 7-10 years)
- SES Anthropometric measurement: Children's height, weight and head circumference
Millions of young children in developing countries have developmental deficits due to some
preventable factors like poor nutrition, lack of a stimulating environment, and poverty.
Although Bangladesh is doing well in achieving MDGs, still poor nutrition, poverty and poor
parental education are prevalent. These mutually exclusive factors have an implication not
only for the individuals' future but also for national income and development.
Usually, iron deficiency in the neonatal period and early childhood is considered a key to
the development of disturbances in cognitive development. There is increasing evidence that
iron deficiency anemia detrimentally affects children's development. Many cross sectional
studies have shown that iron deficiency is associated with poor psycho motor development and
behavioral deficits in young children, and poor cognition and school achievement in
school-aged children. However, anemia is associated with many adverse social and economic
family circumstances which may adversely affect children's development.
Nutrition along with early child development interventions can have additive or synergistic
effects on child development, and in some cases, nutritional outcomes. Meta analysis,
studies conducted in low, middle and high income countries in randomized controlled trials
among primary school aged children (5-12 years) showed that concurrent iron supplementation
improved global cognitive scores and growth and reduced risk of anemia and iron deficiency
among anemic children by 50% and 75% respectively. According to the Lancet reviews on child
development iron deficiency anemia during early childhood, when brain growth spurt occurs is
one of the identified risk factor for later development. Similarly early psycho social
stimulation acts as a protective factor in optimizing later development. Studies in
Indonesia and Canada both found benefits from iron treatment to infants' motor development
but not to mental development. It has been suggested that the poor level of mental
development found in IDA infants may be irreversible in some circumstances. One systematic
review and meta analysis revealed that daily iron supplementation in 2 to 5 years children
increases hemoglobin and ferretin but has limited evidence in cognitive development and
physical growth..
Anemia is a public health problem in Bangladesh where 51% of young children aged 6 to 59
months are suffering and the main cause of this problem is iron deficiency. A study
conducted in Bangladesh found a non significant benefit to motor development from iron alone
however the power of the study was extremely limited and the group receiving iron and zinc
benefited in motor development. We also conducted a cluster randomized controlled trial in
2007-2008 on 6-24 months old iron deficient anemic (IDA) and non- anemic non-iron deficient
(NANI) children with iron supplementation to IDA children for 6 months and weekly psycho
social stimulation to all children in the stimulation clusters for 9 months in Bangladesh.
The result showed that although the intervened IDA group recovered from their iron deficient
status after 9 months, hey had significantly lower psycho motor development index (PDI) and
responsiveness to the examiner compared to NANI group. Random-effects multilevel regressions
of the developmental scores showed that psycho social stimulation improved children's mental
development Index (MDI) in both the group. Interaction between iron status and stimulation
showed a suggestive trend indicating that children with IDA and NANI responded differently
to stimulation, i.e. the IDA group improved less than the NANI group. During that time we
predicted that benefit of Iron supplementation and psycho social stimulation on children may
appear in later life with application of more sensitive measurement tools for intelligence.
The present study provides us a unique opportunity to examine long term effect of early iron
supplementation and psycho social stimulation on growth and development of iron deficient
anemic children.
Hypothesis:
3. The benefit of early iron supplementation in addition to Psycho social stimulation on
growth and development of IDA infants appears in later life.
4. Addition of early psycho social stimulation in treated IDA children help them catch up to
their non-anemic peers in development over time.
Study Objective(s)
1. To determine the long term effect of early psycho social stimulation provided at the
age of 6-24 months in addition to iron treatment in IDA children on their growth
(height, weight and Head Circumference), IQ, executive function, school achievement,
fine motor and behavior
2. To compare the growth and development of IDA infants with non-anemic infants after 7
years of an intervention with iron supplementation and psycho social stimulation.
Study Setting Location: 30 villages of Monohardi Upazilla under Narsingdi district. Study
design: Follow-up of a cluster randomized controlled trial. In the original study
randomization was done at village level for psycho social stimulation. Two hundred and
twelve children (106 anemic and 106 non anemic) aged 6-12 months in the
"stimulation-villages (S)" received age specific psycho social stimulation and 212 children
of "non-stimulation villages (NS: 106 anemic and 106 non anemic) were enrolled as controls.
Mild and moderately anemic (Hb 80.0-109 g/L) and iron deficient (ferritin <12 μg/L) children
of all the assigned villages (both S and NS) received ferrous-sulphate (Fe2SO4) syrup.
Children were considered non-anemic if they had Hb>110 g/L and ferritin levels ≥12 μg/L. For
all groups parental education were less than X grade.
Sample: All children who participated in the original study at the age of 6 to 24 months and
can be located will be enrolled.
IDA group: All the children who were identified as IDA during early childhood (6-24 months)
based on Hb level between 80-110 g/L and sTfR levels ≥ 5.0 mg/L.
Non-anemic group: All the children who were identified as NANI during early childhood based
on Hb >110g/L and sTfR <5.0 mg/L) living in the same rural areas. .
Identification of sample: the study will try to track the children through their addresses
and available mobile phone numbers that are registered during their enrollment. The study
will also contact the local staff who worked as the play leaders and health workers and had
close contact with the families to help us locate the children.
Randomization: In the original study the villages with at least 12 children (6 IDA and 6
NANI) aged 6-24 months were selected and randomly assigned to either psycho social
stimulation or non-stimulation groups.
Intervention In the original study all anemic children in early childhood received 30 mg
ferrous sulfate daily based on recommendations from both the WHO and IOM reports for 6
months. The psycho social intervention lasted for 9 months and included play demonstrations
at home by a play leader (PL) who was trained to visit homes and teach the mothers about
child development and care practices. The study showed the mothers how to play with children
using toys in a way to promote good child development.
Plan of work: After taking written consent, the identified mothers and children will be
interviewed for home based measurements (SES, HOME & SDQ) by team of two members - one
trained testers (graduates in psychology or social science) and one health worker (high
school graduate). The mother will be invited to come along with their children to the test
centers (centrally located in the village) for developmental and anthropocentric
assessments. The same tester will conduct the psychological assessments of the children
while the health worker will assist in bringing and testing them. The testers and health
workers will be unaware about the intervention group (blinded). Four teams will start
assessments at the same time in 4 villages and rotate to the next after completing one. it
is assumed that the testers will complete assessment of 10-12 children in one village in
approximately two and half days.
Measurements
In the current follow-up, at the age of around 8-9 years all the available children will be
measured for:
• WASI: The Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence - Second Edition (WASI-II), a
revision of the WASI, provides a brief, reliable measure of cognitive ability for use in
clinical, educational and research settings. It consists of four sub tests: Vocabulary,
Block Design, Similarities and Matrix Reasoning. Scores of these sub tests lead to calculate
performance IQ (PIQ), verbal IQ (VIQ) as well as a full scale IQ (FSIQ). The average
reliability coefficients of the WASI subtest range from .87 to .92 for the overall
children's sample (Guilford1954 and Nunnally 1978). WASI has been used by this group in
Bangladesh previously and was culturally adapted before use. The adapted and translated
version has been assessed for face validity before use and showed meaningful correlation
with nutritional and socio-economic variables (Ali- personal communication).
Previous study conducted by us showed that cognitive testing of pictures, piloted the
original test on 35 children in Gaibandha and 20 children in Dhaka, and re-ranked the items
according to difficulty. The test retest reliability of the adapted tool ranged from 0.77 to
0.86 for different subscales.
- School achievement: Children's school achievement will be measured using a locally
developed test based on the 'wide range achievement test (WRAT) that measures
mathematics, reading, writing and comprehension abilities. In addition their grade
level, number of grades repeated, attendance in school, age of enrolment at primary
school, age of leaving school, preschool attendance etc. will also be measured. This
test has been used by a member of our group in a previous intervention study in rural
Bangladesh and was sensitive to changes in serum iodine. This adapted version of school
achievement test showed good face validity before testing. It also showed high
concurrent validity (r=0.71) with Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-IV) at
10 years and moderately high predictive validity (r=0.54) of Wechsler Preschool and
Primary Scale of Intelligence (WPPSI) used at 5 years in our recently completed cohort
study in Bangladesh (Tofail -personal communication). It also showed meaningful
correlation with socio-economic variables, parental education and children's
nutritional status.
- Number Stroop: The number Stroop measures executive function of the children. It is a
psychological test for mental (selective attention) vitality and flexibility. It has
been used in Bangladesh in another study in Gaibandha where it picked up intervention
effects (Ali- personal communication). We also used a modified word and color stroop
test in Matlab that showed reasonable concurrent validity (r> 0.45) with other
cognitive measures and socio-demographic variables .We will conduct a pilot test for
number stroop in this study to assess face validity and test -retest reliability before
using.
- Strength and difficulties questionnaire (SDQ): will be used to identify behavioral and
emotional problems of the children based on mother's report. It is a widely and
internationally used brief behavioral screening instrument assessing child positive and
negative attributes across 5 sub-scales: 1) Emotional Symptoms, 2) Conduct Problems, 3)
Hyperactivity-Inattention, 4) Peer Problems, 5) Pro social Behavior. The SDQ has been
extensively researched with various populations and has been translated into over 40
languages. Reliability was generally satisfactory when assessed by internal
consistency: (mean Cronbach α: 0.73), cross-informant correlation (mean: 0.34), or
retest stability after 4 to 6 months (mean: 0.62) . Our team used it in several studies
in Bangladesh and showed meaningful correlation of the sub-scales with socio-economic
variables. We used the parent's report of SDQ and it showed good face validity and a
conceptually meaningful pattern of cross-scale correlations and the acceptable internal
reliability estimates found for each subscale. At five years of age it picked up
intervention effect of prenatal supplementation in our recent analysis.
- Memory sub tests of NEuro PSYchological (NEPSY) Assessment: is a comprehensive
instrument designed to assess neuro psychological development and provide insights
regarding academic, social, and behavioral difficulties in preschool and school-age
children. We will use only the memory test of NEPSY. We have used this memory test in
one of our recent rural study on school children. Although it has been used in
Bangladesh earlier but we will pilot it on current population to modify and adapt it
accordingly.
- Digit span: Digit span forward and backward will be used to measure memory and
executive function of the children. It has been used as a part of Wechsler Intelligence
Scale for Children (WISC-IV) on 10 years old children and currently being used in one
study on rural population. It showed good face validity and test retest reliability
after 7 days. We will also pilot it on our current study area on non-study children to
modify and adapt it accordingly before use.
- HOME: the middle childhood version of home observation for measurement of environment
will be used to assess quality of home stimulation. Overall inter-observer reliability
for the middle childhood -HOME reported to be satisfactory. Percentage agreement for
specific items in the EC-HOME ranged from 79-100% while Cohen's kappa values ranged
from 0.45 to 1. Intraclass correlation for subscale scores were in the interval of 0.79
to 0.94. The intraclass correlation for the total scale was 0.92. It has been used in
several studies of Bangladesh and showed moderately high concurrent validity with IQ
measures (r> 0.5).
- Fine motor skills using the Purdue peg board or Movement Assessment Battery for
Children- 2 (age -band 2 for 7-10 years): it was prefered to conduct MABC-2, but we
will make decision after piloting both the tests. Correlations between MABC-2 test
components ranged between 0.25 and 0.36 (indicating little overlap between subtests).
Correlation scores range from 0.73 to 0.84 for component scores and are equal to 0.80
for total test score. The study conducted earlier by us MABC in Bangladesh in younger
children and MABC-2 in 8-year old children. This time a pilot study will be done on our
current study area on non-study children to modify and adapt it accordingly before use.
- Socio economic status (SES) will be measured using a standard questionnaire.
Anthropometric measurement: Children's height, weight and had circumference will be
measured using standard measures.All these measures were culturally adapted in
Bangladesh and have been used previously by our group. All the instruments are ready to
use but will be pre-tested in the community before using.
Reliabilities Inter-observer reliabilities will be assessed on all measurements before the
study begins and during the study on 10% of all the measurements.
Sample Size In the original study the sample size was calculated as 212 children in each of
the IDA and NANI group considering 5% level of significance, 80% power, an improvement of
0.5 SD in children's development, an ICC of 0.01, design effect of 1.5 and 25% drop outs. In
the follow-up we will assess all the available children of those groups. In the original
study the analysis showed that there was no effect of clustering. Therefore we do not need
to account for the design effect and the sample size without design effect will be 64 in
each group. Considering a drop out of 10%, we need to enrol 70 children in each group and we
believe it is possible to track that many children in those villages to have sufficient
power to conduct the study.
Data Analysis After coding, the data will be entered in to a personal computer using SPSS
11.5 software. We will the check for normality of the data. Log transformation will be done
if any data is positively skewed. The characteristics of the tested and lost groups will be
compared using 'student t test' or ANOVA for continuous variables and χ2 for categorical
variables. Pearson's bivariate correlation will be conducted to explore associations between
the age of the child and each developmental measure.
The sociodemographic characteristics and growth measures at baseline will be compared
between the IDA and NANI groups as well as between the stimulated and unstimulated groups by
using random effects ANOVA.
Finally, it will be fitted random-effects multilevel regression model to the intelligence
scores and nutritional outcome scores by using intention-to-treat analyses. We will
investigate the effects of the IDA/NANI groups and stimulated/ unstimulated groups and their
interaction. In each regression analysis, the outcome will be final developmental score, and
we will adjust for the relevant initial score, along with the selected covariates that are
identified as con-founders.
Data Safety Monitoring Plan (DSMP) Study questionnaires will be recorded on paper forms,
which will be kept in a secure facility under the responsibility of the Principal
Investigator of this study. All questionnaires and data forms will be reviewed for
inconsistencies and missing data points. Edited data will be entered in a personal computer
using SPSS.
Ethical Assurance for Protection of Human rights
Approval of the Research and Ethical Review Committees of icddr,b will be collected.
Written informed consent of one of the parents will be obtained after thorough explanation
of the purpose of the study, requirements of participation, study procedures, and the risks
and benefits to the child. Another person will be acting as witness at the time of consent
signing.
Measures will be taken to ensure strict confidentiality of the information obtained.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label
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