OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact on birth size and risk of low birth weight of alternative combinations of micronutrients given to pregnant women. DESIGN: Double blind cluster randomised controlled trial. SETTING:Rural community in south eastern Nepal. PARTICIPANTS: 4926 pregnant women and 4130 live born infants. INTERVENTIONS:426 communities were randomised to five regimens in which pregnant women received daily supplements of folic acid, folic acid-iron, folic acid-iron-zinc, or multiple micronutrients all given with vitamin A, or vitamin A alone (control). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Birth weight, length, and head and chest circumference assessed within 72 hours of birth. Low birth weight was defined <2500 g. RESULTS: Supplementation with maternal folic acid alone had no effect on birth size. Folic acid-iron increased mean birth weight by 37 g (95% confidence interval -16 g to 90 g) and reduced the percentage of low birthweight babies (<2500 g) from 43% to 34% (16%; relative risk=0.84, 0.72 to 0.99). Folic acid-iron-zinc had no effect on birth size compared with controls. Multiple micronutrient supplementation increased birth weight by 64 g (12 g to 115 g) and reduced the percentage of low birthweight babies by 14% (0.86, 0.74 to 0.99). None of the supplement combinations reduced the incidence of preterm births. Folic acid-iron and multiple micronutrients increased head and chest circumference of babies, but not length. CONCLUSIONS:Antenatal folic acid-iron supplements modestly reduce the risk of low birth weight. Multiple micronutrients confer no additional benefit over folic acid-iron in reducing this risk.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To assess the impact on birth size and risk of low birth weight of alternative combinations of micronutrients given to pregnant women. DESIGN: Double blind cluster randomised controlled trial. SETTING: Rural community in south eastern Nepal. PARTICIPANTS: 4926 pregnant women and 4130 live born infants. INTERVENTIONS: 426 communities were randomised to five regimens in which pregnant women received daily supplements of folic acid, folic acid-iron, folic acid-iron-zinc, or multiple micronutrients all given with vitamin A, or vitamin A alone (control). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Birth weight, length, and head and chest circumference assessed within 72 hours of birth. Low birth weight was defined <2500 g. RESULTS: Supplementation with maternal folic acid alone had no effect on birth size. Folic acid-iron increased mean birth weight by 37 g (95% confidence interval -16 g to 90 g) and reduced the percentage of low birthweight babies (<2500 g) from 43% to 34% (16%; relative risk=0.84, 0.72 to 0.99). Folic acid-iron-zinc had no effect on birth size compared with controls. Multiple micronutrient supplementation increased birth weight by 64 g (12 g to 115 g) and reduced the percentage of low birthweight babies by 14% (0.86, 0.74 to 0.99). None of the supplement combinations reduced the incidence of preterm births. Folic acid-iron and multiple micronutrients increased head and chest circumference of babies, but not length. CONCLUSIONS: Antenatal folic acid-iron supplements modestly reduce the risk of low birth weight. Multiple micronutrients confer no additional benefit over folic acid-iron in reducing this risk.
Authors: Joanne Katz; Subarna K Khatry; Steven C LeClerq; Keith P West; Parul Christian Journal: Matern Child Nutr Date: 2010-07-01 Impact factor: 3.092
Authors: Parul Christian; Mary E Morgan; Laura Murray-Kolb; Steven C LeClerq; Subarna K Khatry; Barbara Schaefer; Pamela M Cole; Joanne Katz; James M Tielsch Journal: J Nutr Date: 2011-09-28 Impact factor: 4.798
Authors: Clifford J Rosen; John S Adams; Daniel D Bikle; Dennis M Black; Marie B Demay; JoAnn E Manson; M Hassan Murad; Christopher S Kovacs Journal: Endocr Rev Date: 2012-05-17 Impact factor: 19.871
Authors: Parul Christian; Joanne Katz; Lee Wu; Elizabeth Kimbrough-Pradhan; Subarna K Khatry; Steven C LeClerq; Keith P West Journal: Public Health Date: 2007-09-10 Impact factor: 2.427
Authors: Parul Christian; Christine P Stewart; Steven C LeClerq; Lee Wu; Joanne Katz; Keith P West; Subarna K Khatry Journal: Am J Epidemiol Date: 2009-09-24 Impact factor: 4.897