| Literature DB >> 31896356 |
Shally Awasthi1, Narayan U Reddy2, Monjori Mitra3, Shweta Singh4, Sanjeev Ganguly5, Ivana Jankovic6, Dominik Grathwohl7, Colin I Cercamondi6, Apurba Ghosh3.
Abstract
Anaemia affects approximately 69 % of Indian children aged 6-12 months, with Fe deficiency (ID) being a common cause. The effectiveness of micronutrient-fortified infant cereal in improving Fe status and neurodevelopment was evaluated in non-anaemic and mildly anaemic Indian infants. An intervention group (IC) enrolled at age 6 months consumed 50 g/d of rice-based cereal providing 3·75 mg Fe/d as ferrous fumarate for 6 months (n 80) and was compared with a matched static cross-sectional control group (CG) without intervention enrolled at age 12 months (n 80). Mean Hb was higher in IC (118·1 (sd 10·2) g/l) v. CG (109·5 (sd 16·4) g/l) at age 12 months (adjusted mean difference: 9·7 g/l; 95 % CI 5·1, 14·3; P < 0·001), while geometric mean serum ferritin tended to be higher (27·0 (-1 sd 13·4, +1 sd 54·4) v. 20·3 (-1 sd 7·5, +1 sd 55·0) ng/ml); P = 0·085) and soluble transferrin receptor was lower (1·70 (-1 sd 1·19, +1 sd 2·43) v. 2·07 (-1 sd 1·29, +1 sd 3·33) mg/l; P = 0·014). Anaemia (23 v. 45 %; P = 0·007) and ID (17 v. 40 %; P = 0·003) were lower in IC v. CG. Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development Third Edition scores for language (P = 0·003), motor development (P = 0·018), social-emotional (P = 0·004) and adaptive behaviour (P < 0·001), but not cognitive development (P = 0·980), were higher in IC v. CG. No significant difference in anthropometric Z-scores was observed between the groups. Consuming a micronutrient-fortified infant cereal daily for 6 months during complementary feeding promoted better Fe status while reducing the risk for anaemia and ID and was associated with superior neurodevelopmental scores.Entities:
Keywords: Anaemia; Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development Third Edition scores; Fortified infant cereal; Hb; Infants; Iron deficiency; Neurodevelopment
Year: 2020 PMID: 31896356 PMCID: PMC7054248 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114519003386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Fig. 1.Study design and participant flow chart. CRP, C-reactive protein.
Energy and nutrient composition of the rice-based micronutrient-fortified infant cereal consumed for 6 months by the infants in the intervention group
| Nutritional component | Amount/daily serving |
|---|---|
| Energy (kJ) | 868 |
| Protein (g) | 7·5 |
| Total fat (g) | 4·5 |
| Linoleic acid (g) | 0·75 |
| | 92·5 |
| Carbohydrate (g) | 34·25 |
| Sugar (g) | 4·5 |
| Fibre (g) | 0·25 |
| Na (mg) | 57·5 |
| Ca (mg) | 219 |
| K (mg) | 175 |
| P (mg) | 175 |
| Mg (mg) | 22·5 |
| Fe (mg) | 3·75 |
| Cu (mg) | 0·15 |
| Zn (mg) | 1·25 |
| Vitamin A (µg) | 175 |
| Vitamin D (µg) | 2·5 |
| Vitamin E (mg) | 1·25 |
| Vitamin C (mg) | 18·75 |
| Thiamin (mg) | 0·25 |
| Riboflavin (mg) | 0·185 |
| Niacin (mg) | 2·75 |
| Pantothenic acid (mg) | 0·75 |
| Vitamin B6 (mg) | 0·2 |
| Folic acid (µg) | 12·5 |
| Biotin (µg) | 2·6 |
| Vitamin B12 (µg) | 0·1 |
Demographic infant and maternal characteristics in the intervention (IC) and static cross-sectional control group (CG) at enrolment
(Mean values and standard deviations; percentages)
| Characteristics | IC ( | CG ( |
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean |
| Mean |
| ||||
| Infant characteristics | |||||||
| Age at enrolment (months) | 5·7 | 0·5 | 11·8 | 0·4 | |||
| Gestational age at birth (weeks) | 36·6 | 0·9 | 36·6 | 0·8 | 0·853 | ||
| Sex (% boys) | 46·3 | 52·5 | 0·429 | ||||
| Birth weight (kg) | 2·9 | 0·5 | 2·8 | 0·5 | 0·425 | ||
| Delivery mode (% Caesarean section) | 65·0 | 61·3 | 0·623 | ||||
| Exclusively breast-fed up to 6 months of age (%) | 77·5 | 93·8 | 0·003 | ||||
| Maternal characteristics | |||||||
| Main caregiver (% mother) | 100 | 100 | |||||
| Maternal age (years) | 27·3 | 4·3 | 26·4 | 3·8 | |||
| Parity (number) | 1·8 | 1·0 | 1·8 | 0·8 | |||
| Level of education (%) | |||||||
| Unschooled/primary or middle school certificate | 28·7 | 23·7 | |||||
| High school certificate/intermediate or post high school diploma | 42·5 | 43·8 | |||||
| Graduate/postgraduate/doctorate/PhD | 28·8 | 32·5 | |||||
| Employment status (% non-employment) | 93·8 | 98·8 | |||||
| Living setting (%) | |||||||
| Urban | 85·0 | 75·0 | |||||
| Sub-urban | 13·8 | 18·8 | |||||
| Rural | 1·2 | 6·2 | |||||
| Socio-economic status (%) | |||||||
| Upper/upper middle | 16·2 | 15·0 | |||||
| Lower middle | 22·5 | 27·5 | |||||
| Upper lower/lower | 61·3 | 57·5 | |||||
P value between group comparison; only assessed for the characteristics that were used as matching criteria between infants in the IC and CG.
Infants in the IC were enrolled at approximately 6 months of age; infants in the CG at approximately 12 months of age.
Independent t test for between-group comparison.
Pearson’s χ 2 test for between-group comparison.
Fisher’s exact test for between-group comparison.
Socio-economic status was based on Kuppuswamy’s scale(.
Iron status indices and C-reactive protein concentration of infants in the intervention group at 6 and 12 months of age (IC) and in the static cross-sectional control group (CG) at 12 months of age
(Mean values and standard deviations; geometric mean and –1 standard deviation and +1 standard deviation)
| Parameter | IC ( | CG ( |
| |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6 months | 12 months | 12 months | ||||||||
| Geometric mean | –1 | Geometric mean | –1 | Geometric mean | –1 | |||||
| Hb (g/l) | ||||||||||
| Mean | 113·4 | 118·1 | 109·5 | <0·001 | ||||||
| | 8·7 | 10·2 | 16·4 | |||||||
| Serum ferritin (ng/ml) | 40·0 | 16·4, 78·7 | 27·0 | 13·4, 54·4 | 20·3 | 7·5, 55·0 | 0·085 | |||
| Serum soluble transferrin receptor (mg/l) | 1·68 | 1·22, 2·31 | 1·70 | 1·19, 2·43 | 2·07 | 1·29, 3·33 | 0·014 | |||
| Serum C-reactive protein (mg/l) | 0·46 | 0·16, 1·34 | 0·84 | 0·20, 3·60 | 0·77 | 0·17, 3·39 | 0·741 | |||
P value for between-group comparison (ANCOVA model correcting for sex, exclusively breast-feeding until 6 months of age (yes/no), Kuppuswamy socio-economic status(, birth weight, gestational age and study site).
Fig. 2.Prevalence of anaemia (a), iron deficiency (b) and iron-deficiency anaemia (c) at 6 and 12 months of age for infants in the intervention group (IC; n 64) and at 12 months of age for infants in the static cross-sectional control group (CG; n 80). , CG; , IC. Significantly different from CG using Pearson’s χ 2 test: * P = 0·007; † P = 0·003; ‡ P = 0·002. Anaemia defined as Hb <110 g/l; iron deficiency defined as serum ferritin <12 μg/l and C-reactive protein (CRP) < 5 mg/l or serum ferritin <30 μg/l and CRP ≥ 5 mg/l; iron-deficiency anaemia defined as Hb <110 g/l and serum ferritin <12 μg/l and CRP < 5 mg/l or Hb <110 g/l and serum ferritin <30 μg/l and CRP ≥ 5 mg/l.
Fig. 3.Neurodevelopment (Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development Third Edition (Bayley-III) scores) of the infants in the intervention group at 6 and 12 months of age (IC; n 64) and in the static cross-sectional control group at 12 months of age (CG; n 80). , IC 6 months; , IC 12 months; , CG 12 months. *†‡§ P value (ANCOVA model correcting for sex, exclusively breast-feeding until 6 months of age (yes/no), Kuppuswamy socio-economic status(, birth weight, gestational age and study site). * Significantly different from IC 12 months (P = 0·001). † Significantly different from IC 12 months (P = 0·022). ‡ Significantly different from IC 12 months (P = 0·005). § Significantly different from IC 12 months (P < 0·001).
Nutrient intake from complementary foods in the infants of the intervention group (IC) and in the static cross-sectional control group (CG) at 12 months of age using 24-h food recall
(Mean values and standard deviations; geometric mean and –1 standard deviation and +1 standard deviation)
| Nutrient | IC ( | CG ( |
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Geometric mean | –1 | Geometric mean | –1 | ||||
| Total fat (g/d) | 8·0 | 4·5, 14·0 | 3·1 | 0·9, 10·3 | <0·001 | ||
| Linoleic acid (g/d) | 3·9 | 1·4, 11·0 | 1·2 | 0·1, 12·7 | <0·001 | ||
|
| 86·8 | 16·5, 455·6 | 7·5 | 1·1, 53·0 | <0·001 | ||
| Carbohydrate (g/d) | |||||||
| Mean | 66·0 | 69·5 | 0·420 | ||||
| | 23·9 | 27·7 | |||||
| Protein (g/d) | |||||||
| Mean | 18·1 | 17·4 | 0·590 | ||||
| | 7·1 | 10·0 | |||||
| Fe (mg/d) | 4·6 | 3·4, 6·3 | 1·5 | 0·3, 6·8 | <0·001 | ||
| Zn (mg/d) | 2·0 | 1·2, 3·4 | 1·2 | 0·4, 3·1 | <0·001 | ||
| Cu (mg/d) | 0·3 | 0·2, 0·5 | 0·2 | 0·1, 0·6 | 0·002 | ||
| Mg (mg/d) | 42·7 | 23·6, 77·2 | 8·5 | 2·1, 35·4 | <0·001 | ||
| Vitamin A (µg/d) | 209·6 | 153·3, 286·6 | 30·2 | 2·3, 389·9 | <0·001 | ||
| Vitamin B12 (µg/d) | 0·18 | 0·01, 2·21 | 0·08 | 0·01, 0·72 | 0·053 | ||
| Folate (µg/d) | 18·7 | 1·5, 236·9 | 34·4 | 3·5, 334·8 | 0·137 | ||
| Vitamin C (mg/d) | 24·0 | 14·3, 40·2 | 2·4 | 0·6, 9·1 | <0·001 | ||
| Vitamin D (µg/d) | 10·5 | 3·4, 32·1 | 6·4 | 0·9, 44·3 | 0·060 | ||
P value from independent t test.