| Literature DB >> 29472265 |
Brita Askeland Winje1, Ingrid Kvestad2, Srinivasan Krishnamachari3, Karim Manji4, Sunita Taneja5, David C Bellinger6, Nita Bhandari5, Shruti Bisht3,5, Anne Marie Darling7, Christopher P Duggan6,7, Wafaie Fawzi7, Mari Hysing2, Tivendra Kumar5, Anura V Kurpad3, Christopher R Sudfeld7, Erling Svensen8, Susan Thomas3, Tor A Strand9,10.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: As many as 250 million children under the age of 5 may not be reaching their full developmental potential partly due to poor nutrition during pregnancy and the first 2 years of life. Micronutrients, including vitamin B12, are important for the development of brain structure and function; however, the timing, duration and severity of deficiencies may alter the impact on functional development outcomes. Consequently, to fully explore the effect of vitamin B12 on cognitive function, it is crucial to measure neurodevelopment at different ages, in different populations and with vitamin B12 supplementation at different times during the critical periods of neurodevelopment. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: In this project, we follow up children from four recently completed randomised placebo-controlled trials of oral vitamin B12 supplementation, two in India and two in Tanzania, to explore the long-term effects on neurodevelopmental outcomes and growth. All the included trials provided at least two recommended dietary allowances of oral vitamin B12 daily for at least 6 months. Vitamin B12 was supplemented either during pregnancy, early infancy or early childhood. Primary outcomes are neurodevelopmental status, cognitive function and growth later in childhood. We apply validated and culturally appropriate instruments to identify relevant developmental outcomes. All statistical analyses will be done according to intention-to-treat principles. The project provides an excellent opportunity to examine the effect of vitamin B12 supplementation in different periods during early life and measure the outcomes later in childhood. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has received ethical approvals from all relevant authorities in Norway, USA, Tanzania and India and complies fully with ethical principles for medical research. Results will be presented at national and international research and policy meetings and published in peer-reviewed scientific journals, preferably open access. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT00641862 (Bangalore); NCT00717730, updated CTRI/2016/11/007494 (Delhi); NCT00197548 and NCT00421668 (Dar es Salaam). © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2018. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive function; event related potential; executive function; growth; neurodevelopment; vitamin B12
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29472265 PMCID: PMC5855385 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-018962
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Overview of study populations, study period and exposure in the original trials and in the Vitabeginning follow-up study
| Characteristics | Bangalore | Delhi | Dares Salaam | |
| Original trials | ||||
| Trial registration number | NCT00641862 | NCT00717730 | NCT00197548 | NCT00421668 |
| Intervention period | 09.2010–08.2011 | 01.2010–03.2011 | 08.2001–02.2005 | 07.2007–05. 2011 |
| Original sample size | 366 | 1000 | 8468 | 2400 |
| Exposure | Vitamin B12* | Vitamin B12 and/or folic acid† | Maternal multivitamins‡ | Multivitamins and/or zinc§ |
| Timing of exposure | Pregnancy (daily supplement from <14 weeks gestational age through 6-week postpartum) | Infancy/early childhood (daily supplement for 6 months from 6 to 30 months) | Pregnancy (daily supplement from 11-17 weeks until delivery) | Infancy (daily supplement from 6 weeks to 18 months) |
| Vitabeginning follow-ups | ||||
| Expected sample size | 230 | 800–900 | 366 | 446 |
| Age range at follow-up | 5–6.5 years | 7–9 years | 11–15 years | 7–10 years |
| Start date of enrolment | 01.2015 | 10.2016 | 07.2015 | 07.2015 |
| Expected date for study completion | Estimated 07.2017 | Estimated 11.2017 | Estimated 11.2017 | Estimated 11.2017 |
*From <14 weeks gestational age to 6 weeks postpartum vitamin B12 50 µg daily. In addition, all women were given iron and folic acid supplementation throughout pregnancy.
†From 6 to 30 months for 6 months; four groups: vitamin B12, vitamin B12 +folic acid, folic acid and placebo, doses >12 months: vitamin B12 1.8 µg and folic acid 150 µg (half doses for <12 months).
‡From 12 to 27 weeks gestational age until delivery: multivitamin B12 50 µg, vitamin B1 20 mg, vitamin B2 20 mg, vitamin B6 25 mg, niacin 100 mg, vitamin C 500 mg, vitamin E 30 mg, folic acid 0.8 mg.
§From 6 weeks to 18 months, four groups; multivitamin + zinc, vitamin Z and placebo. Multivitamin <6m: vitamin B12 1 mg, vitamin B1 0.5 mg, vitamin B2 0.6 mg, vitamin B 60.6mg, niacin 4 mg, folic acid 130 µg, vitamin C 60 mg, vitamin E 8 mg. Zinc 5 mg >6 months multivitamins and zinc doses were double.
Overview over inventories and data collection tools used in the different studies and the age of assessment
| Outcomes to be measured | Bangalore | Delhi | Dar es Salaam | |
| Vitamin B12 exposure | Pregnancy | Child | Pregnancy | Child |
| Outcomes to be measured | Age (year) | Age (year) | Age (year) | Age (year) |
| General abilities | ||||
| Modified KABC-II* EACABT | 5, 6 | 11–15 | 7–10 | |
| WISC-IVINDIA | 7–9 | |||
| Verbal abilities | ||||
| Crichton Vocabulary Scale, Hindi edition | 7–9 | |||
| Neurophysiological tests | ||||
| Event-related potential† | 6 | |||
| Neuropsychological tests | ||||
| NEPSY-II | 7–9 | |||
| Questionnaires | ||||
| Brief‡ | 5.5 | 7–9 | 11–15 | 7–10 |
| SDQ | 6.5 | 7–9 | 11–15 | 7–10 |
| VSMS | 5 | |||
| Maternal assessment | ||||
| Demography | 5 | 7–9 | 11–15 | 7–10 |
| Anthropometry | 5, 5.5, 6, 6.5 | 11–15 | 7–10 | |
| Home environment | 5.5 | 11–15 | 7–10 | |
| Nutrition | ||||
| 24-hour diet recall form | 5, 5.5, 6, 6.5 | 7–9 | ||
| Anthropometry | 5, 5.5, 6, 6.5 | 7–9 | 11–15 | 7–10 |
| Household food security questionnaire | 5, 6 | |||
| Medical morbidity | ||||
| Morbidity questionnaire | 5, 5.5, 6, 6.5 | 11–15 | 7–10 | |
| Biomarkers | ||||
| Vitamin B12 | 5, 6 | 7–9 | 6–24 m§ | |
| CBC, MMA, HcY, RBC folate, CRP | 5, 6 | 7–9 | ||
| Haemoglobin | 5, 6 | 7–9 | 11–15 | 7–10 |
*In Bangalore: Atlantis, number recall, word order, pattern reasoning and triangles from KABC and Koh’s Block Design Test and Verbal Fluency in addition; in Dar es Salaam: the EACABT with permission from Savings Brain Multisite Study (WHO/BMGF) including Atlantis, hand movements, footsteps, story completion, Kilifi Naming Test, ROCF, NOGO, shift, people search, literacy and numeracy, HOME, Brief-P (modified from MAL-ED), SDQ, BQP, in addition to verbal fluency and Koh’s Block.
†ENOBIO 32 (Device name)—brain monitoring and stimulation technologies, mismatch negativity, P300 (Neuroelectrics, Boston, MA).
‡Different versions used in different sites: in Bangalore: Brief Parent; in Delhi: Brief Second Edition; in Dares es Salaam: Saving Brains/Gates/WHO modified version from the malaria study.
§On stored serum samples from Child II cohort (subject to funding).
BMGF, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; BQP, Behavior Questionnaire for Parents; CBC, complete blood count; CRP, C reactive protein; EACBT, African Cognitive Assessment Battery; HcY, homocysteine; HOME, Home Observation Measurement of the Environment; KABC, Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children; MAL-ED, Etiology, Risk Factors and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health and Development, MMA, methylmalonic acid; NEPSY-II, A Developmental NEuroPSYchological Assessment; NOGO, go/no go test for sustained attention and response control; RBC folate, red blood cell folate analysis; ROCF, Rey–Osterrieth complex figure; SDQ, Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire; VSMS, Vineland Social Maturity Scale; WISC-IVINDIA, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children VI, Indian version.
Figure 1Estimated required total sample sizes based on relevant effect sizes.