Mortality Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Study of the Impact of Different Doses of Vitamin A on Childhood Morbidity and Mortality
Vitamin A supplementation reduces all-cause mortality. It is therefore given with oral polio vaccine in national campaigns. However, it is not clear which dose is optimal. The two studies that have investigated the impact of different doses of vitamin A have both found that a smaller dose was better than a large dose. We therefore investigated if a smaller dose given with oral polio vaccine gives equal or better effect.
Vitamin A supplementation (VAS) to children above 6 months of age reduces all-cause
mortality with 23 %1 to 30 % in low-income countries. WHO recommends VAS at vaccination
contacts. The currently recommended doses to be administered every 3-6 months are 100,000 IU
for infants between 6 and 11 months of age and 200,000 IU for children 12 months and older.
There is no clear evidence that a large dose is better than a small dose, the tendency being
the opposite in the two studies of different doses of VAS that have been published so far.
With the global effort to eradicate polio, national immunization days with oral polio
vaccine (OPV) offer an additional opportunity to provide vitamin A. In Guinea-Bissau, a
combined OPV and VAS campaign took place in November 2002. Given the uncertainty about the
best dose of VAS, we aimed to examine whether the dose of vitamin A currently recommended by
WHO or half this dose gives a better protection against childhood morbidity and mortality.
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Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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