| Literature DB >> 32256965 |
Vivian Andrea Welch1,2, Alomgir Hossain2,3,4, Elizabeth Ghogomu5, Alison Riddle2, Simon Cousens6, Michelle Gaffey7, Paul Arora8,9, Robert Black10, Donald Bundy11, Mary Christine Castro12, Li Chen3, Omar Dewidar5, Alison Elliott13, Henrik Friis14, T Déirdre Hollingsworth15, Sue Horton16, Charles H King17, Huong Le Thi18, Chengfang Liu19, Fabian Rohner20, Emily K Rousham21, Rehana Salam22, Erliyani Sartono23, Peter Steinmann24, Taniawati Supali25, Peter Tugwell26, Emily Webb27, Franck Wieringa28, Pattanee Winnichagoon29, Maria Yazdanbakhsh23, Zulfiqar A Bhutta30,31, George A Wells2,3.
Abstract
Intestinal parasites affect millions of children globally. We aimed to assess effects of deworming children on nutritional and cognitive outcomes across potential effect modifiers using individual participant data (IPD). We searched multiple databases to 27 March 2018, grey literature, and other sources. We included randomised and quasi randomised trials of deworming compared to placebo or other nutritional interventions with data on baseline infection. We used a random-effects network meta-analysis with IPD and assessed overall quality, following a pre-specified protocol. We received IPD from 19 trials of STH deworming. Overall risk of bias was low. There were no statistically significant subgroup effects across age, sex, nutritional status or infection intensity for each type of STH. These analyses showed that children with moderate or heavy intensity infections, deworming for STH may increase weight gain (very low certainty). The added value of this review is an exploration of effects on growth and cognition in children with moderate to heavy infections as well as replicating prior systematic review results of small effects at the population level. Policy implications are that complementary public health strategies need to be assessed and considered to achieve growth and cognition benefits for children in helminth endemic areas.Entities:
Keywords: Deworming; individual participant data; network meta-analysis; systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 32256965 PMCID: PMC7077355 DOI: 10.1080/19439342.2019.1691627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Dev Effect ISSN: 1943-9407