| Literature DB >> 21501441 |
Mohammad Yawar Yakoob1, Evropi Theodoratou, Afshan Jabeen, Aamer Imdad, Thomas P Eisele, Joy Ferguson, Arnoupe Jhass, Igor Rudan, Harry Campbell, Robert E Black, Zulfiqar A Bhutta.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Zinc deficiency is commonly prevalent in children in developing countries and plays a role in decreased immunity and increased risk of infection. Preventive zinc supplementation in healthy children can reduce mortality due to common causes like diarrhea, pneumonia and malaria. The main objective was to determine all-cause mortality and cause-specific mortality and morbidity in children under five in developing countries for preventive zinc supplementation. DATA SOURCES/ REVIEWEntities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21501441 PMCID: PMC3231897 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-S3-S23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Flow diagram showing identification of studies.
Figure 2Effect of zinc supplementation on all-cause mortality in children less than five years of age
Figure 3Forest plot for the effect of zinc supplementation on cause-specific mortality in children less than five years of age: A) due to diarrheal diseases B) due to pneumonia
Figure 4Forest plot for the effect of zinc supplementation on diarrhea morbidity (incidence)
Figure 5Forest plot for the effect of zinc supplementation on pneumonia morbidity (incidence)
Quality assessment of overall evidence for effect of zinc supplementation (alone) in reducing morbidity and mortality in children > 5 years of age in developing countries
| No of studies (ref) | Study Design | Limitations | Consistency | Generalizability to Population of Interest | Generalizability to intervention of interest | Relative Risk (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | RCTs | Sequence generation and allocation concealment was unclear in few of the included studies | I2= 50% | Yes (all studies were conducted in developing countries) | The median dose of supplementation was 10 mg/day and median duration of supplementation was for 6 months. | 0.91 (0.82-1.01) |
| 4 | RCTs | Allocation concealment was unclear in two of the included studies | I2=0% | Yes (all studies were conducted in developing countries) | The median dose of supplementation was 10 mg/day and median duration of supplementation was for 6 months. | 0.82 (0.64-1.05) |
| 14 | RCTs | Sequence generation and allocation concealment was unclear in few of the included studies | I2=79% | Yes (all studies were conducted in developing countries) | The median dose of supplementation was 10 mg/day and median duration of supplementation was for 6 months. | 0.87 (0.81-0.94) |
| 4 | RCTs | Allocation concealment was unclear in two of the included studies | I2= 39% | Yes (all studies were conducted in developing countries) | The median dose of supplementation was 10 mg/day and median duration of supplementation was for 6 months. | 0.85 (0.65-1.11) |
| 6 | RCTs | Sequence generation and allocation concealment was unclear in few of the included studies | I2=0% | Yes (all studies were conducted in developing countries) | The median dose of supplementation was 10 mg/day and median duration of supplementation was for 6 months. | 0.81 (0.73-0.90) |
| 1 | RCT | None | NA | Study conducted in Zanzibar | Dose of supplementation was 10 mg/dl for children > 1 year and 5mg/day for children < 1 years. | 0.90 (0.77-1.06) |
| 4 | RCTs | Allocation concealment was unclear in two of the included studies | I2=0% | Yes (all studies were conducted in developing countries) | The median dose of supplementation was 10 mg/day and median duration of supplementation was for 6 months. | 0.92 (0.82-1.04) |
Application of standardized rules for choice of final outcome to estimate effect of zinc supplementation on mortality due to diarrhea, pneumonia and malaria in children less than 5 years of age
| Outcome measure | Studies | Relative risk reduction | Application of standard rules |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cause specific mortality (diarrhea) | 4 | 18% reduction; | |
| Incidence of diarrhea | 14 | 13% reduction; | Rule 6 is applied |
| Cause specific mortality (pneumonia) | 4 | 15% reduction; | Rule 6 applied |
| Pneumonia morbidity | 6 | 19% reduction; | Rule 6 applied |