Nutritional Deficiencies Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development and Health of Rural Chinese Children Fed Meat as a Daily Complementary Food From 6-18 Mos of Age
Inadequate feeding of infants and toddlers impairs physical and cognitive development and is
a major contributor to early childhood infectious disease illnesses and preventable
mortality. Optimal feeding has two broad components: Exclusive breast feeding (EBF) for the
first-6 months followed by continued breast feeding accompanied by complementary foods (CF)
that is adequate in quantity and quality. While EBF is theoretically straightforward, CF is
more complex. This is because CF is typically limited mainly or entirely to plant-based
foods in developing countries worldwide. Dependence on adequate, affordable locally-produced
foods for complete CF requires an inexpensive, regular source of meat especially to provide
'problem' micronutrients, notably, but not only, zinc and bioavailable iron. While the use
of micronutrient-fortified CF and of supplements, including SprinklesTM, is spreading, their
efficacy largely remains uncertain as does their availability, particularly on a
sustainable, affordable basis Achievement of the widespread regular use of meat as a CF
requires: (1) adequate local production of affordable small scavenging/foraging animals in
poor rural and, where feasible, periurban communities worldwide; (2) effective communication
for behavioral change/education so that young children, starting at age 6 months (when meat
is readily accepted by infants), receive priority in the use of this meat. Solid scientific
evidence of the value of international/national programs to achieve this goal is essential
to provide the basis and incentive for major international and national programs to promote
the feeding of meat as an early and regular CF. The acquisition of such evidence is the goal
of this study
The intervention to be evaluated is meat fed daily as a complementary food from age 6-18
months. Thirty infants-toddlers in each of 60 rural communities (total of 1,800 subjects)
will participate. In a cluster design, twenty communities (test) will be randomized to
receive meat,twenty communities (control) will receive a plant recipe providing the same
amount of calories, twenty communities (fortified cereal) will receive a commercially
available fortified cereal providing the same amount of calories. This project will be
located in rural China in a county where high quality collaboration is already established,
and where we have recently demonstrated inadequate bioavailable zinc intake and zinc
deficiency in toddlers. We have also found a high (30%) incidence of stunting, now widely
used as an indirect indicator of populations with zinc deficiency. Other advantages of this
location include the willingness of doctors located in each rural community to provide the
test or control meal 7 days per week in their homes and the absence of any access to
supplements / fortified products which could complicate interpretation of data. The young
children in the test communities will receive certified safe lean pork 7 days per wk.
Starting with a very small quantity at 6 months, the quantity of lean pork will be increased
as infants are ready to take more up to a plateau of 2 oz/d. No subsequent increases are
planned because neither zinc nor iron requirements increase from 6-11 months to 12-18
months. Lean pork will be used because pigs are ubiquitous in China and can be maintained
cheaply by scavenging/foraging on waste materials adjacent to human habitation. Test and
control clusters will also receive nutrition education to achieve maximal diversification of
locally available affordable foods. Longitudinal outcome measures include indices of
physical growth, especially length; infectious disease incidence and prevalence; cognitive
development; zinc and iron intake and biomarkers for these and other micronutrients. Zinc
absorption will be measured. Data will flow daily from communities to the district hospital
in Xi-Chou, weekly to the data manager in Shanghai and 3-monthly to the Data Monitoring
Safety Board (DSMB) and to the University of Colorado research group.
Objectives The goal of this project is to determine the efficacy of a daily intake of
locally available, low cost meat as a complementary food for young children aged 6-18 months
who are otherwise dependent on continued breast feeding and locally available non-fortified
plant foods only. Efficacy will be determined by public health outcomes, including
infectious disease morbidity and both physical and cognitive development, with linear growth
as the primary outcome measure. Other outcome measures required for interpretation of these
results are food and nutrient intake; biomarkers of key micronutrient status; zinc
absorption and measures of host factor that might compromise the effects of optimizing
nutrition.
Rationale Inadequate complementary feeding (CF) is a major contributor to preventable
morbidity and mortality in young children in the developing world. Except in emergency
situations, inadequate macronutrient intake is largely attributable to lack of adequate
maternal knowledge, while optimal micronutrient intake depends on food diversity. Though
food fortification programs can diminish or possibly eradicate the need for food diversity,
reliable sources of affordable fortified foods/supplements are frequently unavailable and
their efficacy not always certain. Locally grown, nutritionally complete affordable sources
of CF are and will remain a key strategy especially for the millions of rural poor. Adequate
food diversity depends on meat to provide adequate zinc and also a favorable source of
bioavailable iron, in addition to assuring sufficient intake of other key micronutrients,
e.g. vitamin B12. Meat's theoretical benefits in CF have not, however, been tested
adequately. Clear demonstration of public health benefits is essential to support policies
to promote local production of adequate, affordable small foraging animals with priority use
for older infants/toddlers. The long-term goal is to achieve nutritionally complete
complementary feeding from affordable local sources for millions of poor rural/semi-rural
young children worldwide.
Methods The project is an unmasked randomized controlled trial with cluster design in which
60 rural village communities, each with 30 infants, within the County of Xi-Chou, Wen-Shan,
Yunnan Province, SW China will be randomly selected and randomly assigned to intervention or
control clusters. The intervention will be meat fed daily from age 6-18 months. Control
participants will receive an equi-caloric rice-based supplement or a commercially available
fortified rice cereal. The intervention team will include 80 community doctors, supervised
and supported by senior staff at Xi-Chou Women's and Children's Hospital. This senior staff
will be also be responsible for purchasing and quality of intervention foods. The
intervention meat will be certified safe pork, because pigs are ubiquitous in rural China
and can be maintained cheaply by foraging/scavenging. Lean pork, which will be increased as
accepted up to a plateau of 2 oz/d, will be provided as a meat-rice recipe daily in the
community doctors' homes; any food remaining will be fed at home later in the day. Control
children will receive a daily plant-based recipe or fortified rice cereal also in their
community doctors' homes. Starting at the time of recruitment at age 3 months, monthly
nutrition education messages will be given to mothers. Initially focusing on exclusive
breast feeding; after 6 months of age, education for both test and control clusters will
focus on optimizing diversity of locally available, affordable complementary foods and on
responsive feeding (messages designed to increase energy intake are not required in this
population). Specially trained local and Shanghai health research teams will obtain
longitudinal outcome measures between 6-18 months. Outcomes include: anthropometry at 6, 9,
12, 15 and 18 months; daily records of infectious disease morbidity (kept by community
doctors); Bayley Scales of Infant Development III at 6, 12, 18 months plus the WHO motor
questionnaire; 24-hr dietary recall data at 6, 7, 9, 12, 15 18 months; biomarkers and, on a
subsample, measurements of zinc absorption and gut function at 6, 9 and 18 months. Data will
be transferred daily to the local research base at Xi-Chou Women and Children's Hospital,
checked for accuracy and entered into the data management system. These data will be
transferred weekly to the data manager in Shanghai Jiao Tong University, School of Medicine,
Xin-Hua Hospital. Data will be collated and shared with the Colorado research group at
3-monthly intervals. SAS software will be used for a range of outcome-specific statistical
measures.
Significance Positive outcomes for meat group versus controls will provide scientific
justification for promotion of production of affordable small animal meats globally in
rural/semi-rural and even peri-urban communities and of communication for behavioral
change/education to provide meat as a regular complementary feed from age 6 months.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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