| Literature DB >> 23734210 |
Ibironke Olofin1, Christine M McDonald, Majid Ezzati, Seth Flaxman, Robert E Black, Wafaie W Fawzi, Laura E Caulfield, Goodarz Danaei.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Child undernutrition affects millions of children globally. We investigated associations between suboptimal growth and mortality by pooling large studies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23734210 PMCID: PMC3667136 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0064636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author, year | Country | Study design | Study recruitment dates | Age range at recruitment [months] | No. of participants recruited | No. of eligibleParticipants(current analysis) | Proportion female (%) | No. of deaths(current analysis) | Median (total) follow-up for current analysis [years, (person years)] |
|
| Bangladesh | Prospective cohort | 1993–1995 | 0–0.4 | 1677 | 1581 | 49.2 | 119 | 1.0 (1240) |
|
| Ghana | RCT | 1995–1997 | 0.5–5 | 2882 | 2869 | 50.9 | 61 | 0.8 (1902) |
|
| Guinea-Bissau | Prospective cohort | 1987–1990 | 0–50 | 1165 | 1145 | 49 | 114 | 1.2 (1267) |
|
| India | RCT | 1995–1996 | 1–5 | 3981 | 3926 | 48.3 | 88 | 0.9 (3074) |
|
| Indonesia | Prospective cohort | 1977 | 0–71 | 4696 | 3899 | 48.4 | 156 | 1.0 (4488) |
|
| Nepal | RCT | 1989 | 0–60 | 6617 | 6418 | 48.4 | 137 | 1.6 (8051) |
|
| Peru | RCT | 1995–1996 | 1–6 | 2437 | 2393 | 49.2 | 15 | 0.8 (1726) |
|
| Philippines | Prospective cohort | 1982–1983 | 0–3 | 3080 | 2948 | 47.1 | 110 | 1.8 (4924) |
|
| Senegal | Prospective cohort | 1983 | 0–61 | 5781 | 5750 | 49.5 | 354 | 0.9 (4589) |
|
| Sudan | RCT | 1988 | 0–89 | 29 615 | 22 880 | 48.9 | 161 | 1.5 (24 098) |
Randomized trial of vitamin A supplementation.
Age distribution of children at study entry and exit.
| Study entry | Study exit | ||
| Age (months) | No. at baseline (% of all children) | No. censored | No. of deaths (% of all children) |
|
| 18480 (34.34) | 2704 (5.03) | 292 (0.54) |
|
| 3563 (6.62) | 9416 (17.50) | 232 (0.43) |
|
| 4250 (7.90) | 2753 (5.12) | 191 (0.35) |
|
| 4282 (7.96) | 4076 (7.57) | 182 (0.34) |
|
| 3954 (7.35) | 3844 (7.14) | 172 (0.32) |
|
| 4226 (7.85) | 4144 (7.70) | 100 (0.19) |
|
| 4014 (7.46) | 4230 (7.86) | 65 (0.12) |
|
| 3899 (7.25) | 3987 (7.41) | 40 (0.07) |
|
| 3818 (7.10) | 4115 (7.65) | 27 (0.05) |
|
| 3323 (6.18) | 13225 (24.58) | 14 (0.03) |
|
| 53809 (100) | 52494 (97.56) | 1315 (2.44) |
Number censored includes children who were administratively censored and those lost to follow-up.
Minimally adjusteda hazard ratios (HR) using WHO 2006 standards and NCHS/WHO 1977 reference.
| WHO 2006 | NCHS/WHO 1977 | |||
| No. of deaths | HR (95% CI) | No. of deaths | HR (95% CI) | |
|
| ||||
|
| 489 | 9.40 (8.02, 11.03) | 411 | 12.75 (10.48, 15.50) |
| − | 284 | 2.63 (2.20, 3.14) | 366 | 3.84 (3.16, 4.67) |
| − | 287 | 1.52 (1.28, 1.81) | 286 | 1.72 (1.43, 2.08) |
|
| 254 | Ref | 251 | Ref |
|
| ||||
|
| 477 | 5.48 (4.62, 6.50) | 381 | 6.58 (5.50, 7.87) |
| − | 305 | 2.28 (1.91, 2.72) | 318 | 2.78 (2.33, 3.30) |
| − | 283 | 1.46 (1.23, 1.74) | 328 | 1.62 (1.37, 1.91) |
|
| 239 | Ref | 277 | Ref |
|
| ||||
|
| 220 | 11.63 (9.84, 13.76) | 120 | 17.71 (14.28, 21.97) |
| − | 205 | 3.38 (2.86, 3.98) | 225 | 4.96 (4.17, 5.90) |
| − | 308 | 1.62 (1.41, 1.87) | 394 | 1.87 (1.62, 2.15) |
|
| 571 | Ref | 565 | Ref |
Models were stratified on cohort and adjusted for age (as the time scale, in weeks), child’s sex and assigned treatment in randomized trials.
Figure 1Associations of anthropometric measures (in increments of 0.5 Z scores) with all-cause mortality, WHO 2006 child growth standards.
(A) Weight-for-age; (B) Height/length-for-age; (C) Weight-for-Height/Length.
Minimally-adjusteda versus maximally-adjusted hazard ratios (HR) for 6 cohortsb that reported additional baseline covariates beyond sex and randomized treatment assignment, WHO 2006 standards.
| Minimally adjusted hazard ratios | Maximally adjusted hazard ratios | |||||
| Pooled | I2 | p value | Pooled | I2 | p value | |
|
| ||||||
|
| 12.80 (6.97, 23.49) | 42% | 0.12 | 11.88 (6.03, 23.43) | 49% | 0.08 |
| − | 3.39 (2.12, 5.41) | 0% | 0.57 | 3.06 (1.79, 5.22) | 15% | 0.32 |
| − | 1.72 (1.08, 2.73) | 0% | 0.9 | 1.67 (1.04, 2.70) | 0% | 0.85 |
|
| Ref | Ref | ||||
|
| ||||||
|
| 6.41 (3.77, 10.89) | 29% | 0.21 | 5.50 (3.04, 9.98) | 39% | 0.14 |
| − | 2.45 (1.56, 3.87) | 0% | 0.61 | 2.12 (1.33, 3.38) | 0% | 0.63 |
| − | 1.56 (0.98, 2.46) | 0% | 0.97 | 1.44 (0.90, 2.30) | 0% | 0.99 |
|
| Ref | Ref | ||||
|
| ||||||
|
| 14.32 (8.76, 23.41) | 28% | 0.22 | 14.20 (7.98, 25.27) | 42% | 0.13 |
| − | 3.70 (2.43, 5.61) | 0% | 0.78 | 3.47 (2.24, 5.36) | 0% | 0.84 |
| − | 1.67 (1.13, 2.46) | 0% | 0.95 | 1.61 (1.08, 2.42) | 0% | 0.81 |
|
| Ref | Ref | ||||
Adjusted for age (as the time scale, in weeks), child’s sex, cohort characteristics, and assigned treatment (in randomized trials).
Nepal, Indonesia, Philippines, Bangladesh, Sudan, Guinea-Bissau.
Hazard ratios were estimated in each cohort separately and then pooled using a random effects meta-analysis (see Methods).
p value for test of no heterogeneity.
Minimally adjusteda hazard ratio (HR) estimates for specific causes of mortality, WHO 2006 standards.
| Mortality from respiratory tract infections | Mortality from diarrheal disease | Mortality from other infectious causes | Mortality from malaria | Mortality from measles | ||||||
| No. ofdeaths | HR (95% CI) | No. ofdeaths | HR (95% CI) | No. ofdeaths | HR (95% CI) | No. ofdeaths | HR (95% CI) | No. ofdeaths | HR (95% CI) | |
|
| ||||||||||
|
| 68 | 10.10 (6.53, 15.64) | 154 | 11.56 (8.63, 15.48) | 36 | 8.28 (4.32, 15.89) | 3 | 1.29 (0.39, 4.29) | 26 | 7.73 (4.15, 14.39) |
| − | 41 | 3.11 (1.93, 5.02) | 74 | 2.86 (2.03, 4.03) | 13 | 1.58 (0.73, 3.45) | 10 | 1.65 (0.77, 3.53) | 23 | 3.12 (1.67, 5.80) |
| − | 43 | 1.85 (1.17, 2.91) | 77 | 1.73 (1.24, 2.40) | 21 | 1.54 (0.78, 3.03) | 16 | 1.26 (0.66, 2.39) | 13 | 1.00 (0.49, 2.03) |
|
| 35 | Ref | 66 | Ref | 19 | Ref | 22 | Ref | 18 | Ref |
|
| ||||||||||
|
| 61 | 6.39 (4.19, 9.75) | 136 | 6.33 (4.64, 8.65) | 29 | 3.01 (1.55, 5.82) | 10 | 1.92 (0.89, 4.11) | 29 | 6.01 (3.00, 12.07) |
| − | 38 | 2.18 (1.39, 3.43) | 79 | 2.38 (1.71, 3.31) | 24 | 1.86 (0.97, 3.57) | 11 | 1.06 (0.48, 2.32) | 22 | 2.79 (1.40, 5.56) |
| − | 46 | 1.55 (1.02, 2.37) | 85 | 1.67 (1.20, 2.30) | 17 | 0.95 (0.48, 1.87) | 12 | 0.74 (0.35, 1.56) | 15 | 1.25 (0.61, 2.58) |
|
| 41 | Ref | 66 | Ref | 20 | Ref | 18 | Ref | 14 | Ref |
|
| ||||||||||
|
| 28 | 9.68 (6.07, 15.43) | 73 | 12.33 (9.18, 16.57) | 14 | 11.21(5.91, 21.27) | 1 | 1.24 (0.17, 9.29) | 13 | 9.63 (5.15, 18.01) |
| − | 41 | 4.66 (3.07, 7.09) | 61 | 3.41 (2.52, 4.63) | 11 | 2.73 (1.35, 5.54) | 4 | 1.43 (0.52, 3.94) | 12 | 2.58 (1.32, 5.06) |
| − | 47 | 1.92 (1.31, 2.84) | 83 | 1.60 (1.23, 2.11) | 23 | 1.65 (0.98, 2.79) | 8 | 0.86 (0.39, 1.90) | 15 | 1.02 (0.56, 1.85) |
|
| 70 | Ref | 149 | Ref | 42 | Ref | 38 | Ref | 40 | Ref |
Adjusted for age (as the time scale, in weeks), child’s sex, cohort characteristics, and assigned treatment (in randomized trials).
Septicemia, unspecified febrile illness, tuberculosis, meningitis, hepatitis or cellulitis.
hree cohorts reported malaria deaths [23], [27], [29].
even cohorts reported measles deaths [23]–[27], [29], [30].