Differing growth responses to nutritional supplements in neighboring health districts of Burkina Faso are likely due to benefits of small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (LNS)
PREPUBERTAL CHILDREN
Male
General Science & Technology
Science
Clinical Sciences
610
INFANTS
03 medical and health sciences
MALARIA
AGE
Clinical Research
Residence Characteristics
Burkina Faso
Medicine and Health Sciences
LENGTH
Humans
EARLY-CHILDHOOD
Child
Preschool
Nutrition
Pediatric
2. Zero hunger
0303 health sciences
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Q
R
Age Factors
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
DIARRHEA
Lipids
3. Good health
Zinc
Good Health and Well Being
Health
Child, Preschool
Dietary Supplements
UNDERNUTRITION
Medicine
Female
WEIGHT
Growth and Development
Research Article
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0181770
Publication Date:
2017-08-03T17:43:33Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
Of two community-based trials among young children in neighboring health districts of Burkina Faso, one found that small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (LNS) increased child growth compared with a non-intervention control group, but zinc supplementation did not in the second study.We explored whether the disparate growth outcomes were associated with differences in intervention components, household demographic variables, and/or children's morbidity.Children in the LNS study received 20g LNS daily containing different amounts of zinc (LNS). Children in the zinc supplementation study received different zinc supplementation regimens (Z-Suppl). Children in both studies were visited weekly for morbidity surveillance. Free malaria and diarrhea treatment was provided by the field worker in the LNS study, and by a village-based community-health worker in the zinc study. Anthropometric assessments were repeated every 13-16 weeks. For the present analyses, study intervals of the two studies were matched by child age and month of enrollment. The changes in length-for-age z-score (LAZ) per interval were compared between LNS and Z-Suppl groups using mixed model ANOVA or ANCOVA. Covariates were added to the model in blocks, and adjusted differences between group means were estimated.Mean ages at enrollment of LNS (n = 1716) and Z-Suppl (n = 1720) were 9.4±0.4 and 10.1±2.7 months, respectively. The age-adjusted change in mean LAZ per interval declined less with LNS (-0.07±0.44) versus Z-Suppl (-0.21±0.43; p<0.0001). There was a significant group by interval interaction with the greatest difference found in 9-12 month old children (p<0.0001). Adjusting for demographic characteristics and morbidity did not reduce the observed differences by type of intervention, even though the morbidity burden was greater in the LNS group.Greater average physical growth in children who received LNS could not be explained by known cross-trial differences in baseline characteristics or morbidity burden, implying that the observed difference in growth response was partly due to LNS.
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