PEDIATRICS Vol. 104 No. 1 July 1999, p. e1
Received Oct 7, 1998; accepted Feb 24, 1999.
,
,
From the * Corporación Ecuatoriana de
Biotecnología (Ecuadorian Biotechnology Corporation);
Departamento de Inmunología, Escuela de Medicina,
Universidad Central del Ecuador, Quito, Ecuador (Department of
Immunology, Medical School, Central University); § Ministerio de Salud
Pública del Ecuador (Ministry of Public Health, Republic of
Ecuador); ¶ Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, Tufts
University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Background. Previous studies of large-dose vitamin A supplementation on respiratory morbidity have produced conflicting results in a variety of populations. The influence of malnutrition has not been examined in the majority of these trials. We hypothesized that weekly low-dose vitamin A supplementation would prevent respiratory and diarrheal disease morbidity and that malnutrition might influence the efficacy of vitamin A supplementation.
Methods. In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled field trial of 400 children, 6 to 36 months of age in a high Andean urban slum, half of the children received 10 000 IU of vitamin A weekly and half received placebo for 40 weeks. Children were visited weekly at home by physicians and assessed for acute diarrheal disease and acute respiratory infections.
Results. Acute diarrheal disease and acute respiratory
infection did not differ globally or by severity between
supplement-treated and placebo groups. However, the incidence of acute
lower respiratory infection (ALRI) was significantly lower in
underweight (weight-for-age z score [WAZ] <
2 SD)
supplement-treated children than in underweight children on placebo
(8.5 vs 22.3 per 103 child-weeks; rate ratio: 0.38 [95%
CI: 0.17-0.85]). ALRI incidence was significantly higher in
normal-weight (WAZ >
2 SD) supplement-treated children
than in normal-weight children on placebo (9.8 vs 4.4 per
103 child-weeks; rate ratio: 2.21 [95% CI: 1.24-3.93]).
By logistic regression analysis the risk of ALRI was lower in
underweight supplement-treated children than in underweight children on
placebo (point estimate 0.148 [95% CI: 0.034-0.634]). In contrast,
risk of ALRI was higher in normal-weight supplement-treated children (WAZ >
1 SD to mean) than in normal-weight children on placebo in the
same WAZ stratum (point estimate: 2.51 [95% CI: 1.24-5.05]). The
risk of severe diarrhea was lower in supplement-treated children 18 to
23 months of age than in children on placebo in this age group (point
estimate: 0.26 [95% CI: 0.06-1.00]).
Conclusions. Weekly low-dose (10 000 IU) vitamin A
supplementation in a region of subclinical deficiency protected
underweight children from ALRI and paradoxically increased ALRI in
normal children with body weight over
1 SD. Protection from severe
diarrhea was consistent with previous trials. Additional research is
warranted to delineate potential beneficial and detrimental
interactions between nutritional status and vitamin A supplementation
regarding ALRI.
Key words:
vitamin A,
lower respiratory
infection,
underweight children,
diarrhea.
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