| Literature DB >> 34036318 |
Kenneth H Brown1, Sophie E Moore2,3, Sonja Y Hess1, Christine M McDonald4,5, Kerry S Jones6, Sarah R Meadows6, Mari S Manger5, Jennifer Coates7, Silvia Alayon8,9, Saskia J M Osendarp10.
Abstract
Micronutrient (MN) deficiencies can produce a broad array of adverse health and functional outcomes. Young, preschool children and women of reproductive age in low- and middle-income countries are most affected by these deficiencies, but the true magnitude of the problems and their related disease burdens remain uncertain because of the dearth of reliable biomarker information on population MN status. The reasons for this lack of information include a limited understanding by policy makers of the importance of MNs for human health and the usefulness of information on MN status for program planning and management; insufficient professional capacity to advocate for this information and design and implement related MN status surveys; high costs and logistical constraints involved in specimen collection, transport, storage, and laboratory analyses; poor access to adequately equipped and staffed laboratories to complete the analyses reliably; and inadequate capacity to interpret and apply this information for public health program design and evaluation. This report describes the current situation with regard to data availability, the reasons for the lack of relevant information, and the steps needed to correct this situation, including implementation of a multi-component MN Data Generation Initiative to advocate for critical data collection and provide related technical assistance, laboratory services, professional training, and financial support.Entities:
Keywords: laboratory quality assurance; mineral deficiency; nutrition biomarkers; nutrition surveys; nutritional status assessment; vitamin deficiency
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34036318 PMCID: PMC8408880 DOI: 10.1093/ajcn/nqab173
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Clin Nutr ISSN: 0002-9165 Impact factor: 7.045
Key biomarkers recommended for assessing status of selected MNs by BOND, NYAS, WHO, and other expert groups
| Nutrient | Primary recommended biomarkers | Expert groups | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin A[ | s/p retinol, retinol binding protein | BOND, WHO | ( |
| total body stores (retinol isotope dilution method) | IAEA | ( | |
| Thiamine | RBC or whole blood thiamine diphosphate, RBC transketolase activity | Global Thiamine Alliance | ( |
| Folate | RBC/s/p folate | BOND, WHO, Folate Task Team | ( |
| Vitamin B12 | s/p cobalamin, transcobalamin-2, methyl malonic acid | BOND, WHO | ( |
| Vitamin D | s/p 25-OH vitamin D | Multiple [see Roth et al. ( | ( |
| Iodine | urinary iodine, s/p thyroglobulin | BOND, IGN, WHO | ( |
| Iron[ | s/p ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor, transferrin saturation, RBC zinc protoporphyrin | BOND, WHO | ( |
| Zinc[ | s/p zinc | BOND, IZiNCG | ( |
Abbreviations: BOND, Biomarkers of Nutrition for Development; IAEA, International Atomic Energy Agency; IGN, Iodine Global Network; IZiNCG, International Zinc Nutrition Consultative Group; MN, micronutrient; NYAS, New York Academy of Sciences; RBP, retinol-binding protein; s/p, serum or plasma can be used for analyses.
Markers of inflammation should also be measured to help with the interpretation of status markers for vitamin A (retinol and RBP), iron (ferritin), and zinc (serum zinc concentration).
FIGURE 1Number of low- and middle-income countries with specified data on MN status of selected population subgroups since 1980, according to the WHO's Vitamin and Mineral Nutrition Information System. Data are from the WHO (51), downloaded from the WHO website on 28 February 2020. Data from high-income countries were not included in tallies. Abbreviations: MN, micronutrient; NPW, nonpregnant women of reproductive age; PSC, preschool-age children; RBP, retinol-binding protein.
FIGURE 2MN and inflammation biomarkers included in national surveys completed from 2015–2019 or currently being planned; n = total number of specimens intended for analysis for women of reproductive age and preschool children combined. (Urinary iodine was generally analyzed in school-age children.) Guatemala data are from individual rounds of a national surveillance system, reflecting the period from 2015–2019. Abbreviations: AGP, alpha-1 acid glycoprotein; CRP, C-reactive protein; MN, micronutrient; MRDR, Modified Relative Dose Response test; RBP, retinol-binding protein.
FIGURE 3Theory of change for generating reliable data on population MN status globally. Abbreviations: EQA, External Quality Assessment; MN, micronutrient.
Summary of working group recommendations
| Launch a multi-component, multi-stakeholder MN Data Generation Initiative |
| Establish a management team to lead and coordinate among stakeholders and implement selected tasks, including fundraising for the Initiative |
| Conduct advocacy, targeted both to in-country decision makers and program officers of development assistance agencies, to explain the importance of MNs, the need for MN status data, and methods for generating this information |
| Provide technical assistance to countries in survey design, specimen collection and laboratory analysis, and data analysis and interpretation |
| Create a central fund to help countries defray the costs of specimen collection and analysis |
| Develop consensus and disseminate information on preferred laboratory analysis methods for each MN biomarker |
| Establish regional resource laboratories to receive and analyze biological specimens collected during national nutrition surveys and to provide laboratory training |
| Expand and increase accessibility to external laboratory quality assessment programs and support preparation of certified reference materials where needed |
| Support a central data repository to archive survey results and periodically summarize these findings with regard to the global and regional prevalence of individual MN deficiencies, risk factors, and time trends |
| Track the progress of these activities of the Initiative and their impact on MN deficiency control programs |
Abbreviation: MN, micronutrient.