Malnutrition Clinical Trial
Official title:
Lungwena Child Nutrition Intervention Study 3, LCNI-3. A Single-Centre Intervention Trial in Rural Malawi, Testing the Anthropometric and Health Benefits of Provision of Ready to - Use - Therapeutic Food RUTF as a Complementary Food
This study tests the hypothesis that infants receiving fortified spread as a complementary food for one year grow better and do not become malnourished as often as infants who are provided with maize-soy flour for complementary porridge.
Childhood undernutrition is very common in rural Malawi, like in many other countries in
Sub-Saharan Africa. Usually, undernutrition develops between 6 and 24 months of age. By two
years of age, 30-50% of all children in rural Malawi are undernourished, predisposing them
to subsequent morbidity, developmental delay and mortality. Urgent interventions are needed
but the magnitude of the problem precludes a hospital-based management strategy. Therefore,
emphasis must be on prevention and early home-based rehabilitation of children with
mild-to-moderate malnutrition. However, the options for community based approaches are not
as developed as those for institutional management of undernutrition.
The present study tests a recently developed nutrient -dense spread, ready-to use-
therapeutic food (RUTF), which offers a potential solution to home based nutrition
rehabilitation. The concept has previously been shown to work not only in therapeutic
feeding of undernourished children in nutrition rehabilitation units in Malawi but also home
based supplementation of undernourished children in Mangochi District, southern Malawi. In
the present study the investigators will test the efficacy in growth promotion and other
health benefits of this product when provided as a complementary food to infants between 6
and 18 months of age.
The study will be conducted in Lungwena area, Mangochi District, rural Malawi. A total of
180 6-month old infants will be enrolled and randomised to three groups receiving different
daily food supplements for 12 months. Children in group-one (control group) will receive 75g
of maize/soy flour daily. Children in group-two will receive 25g RUTF daily and children in
group-three will receive 50g RUTF daily for a period of 12 months. The food supplements will
be delivered to the participant's home at weekly intervals.
All children will undergo medical and anthropometric examinations at 4-monthly intervals and
disease symptoms monitoring every week. Dietary intake assessments will be conducted at 12
and 15 months of age. A random sample of 36 children will undergo breast milk intake
assessments before the start of food supplementation and during food supplementation. A
blood sample will be collected at the beginning and end of the study to measure blood
haemoglobin and serum ferritin concentrations and test human immunodeficiency virus [HIV]
(at 6 and 18 months).
The impact of the dietary interventions will be primarily assessed by comparing weight gain
in the three intervention groups. Secondary outcomes include length gain, incidence of
moderate underweight, stunting and wasting, cognitive and motor development at the end of
trial and changes in blood haemoglobin and serum ferritin concentration. The study will also
produce descriptive data on morbidity and intake of breast milk and other foods during the
intervention.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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