用微量营养素改善婴儿神经认知发育和生长结果(INDiGO):冈比亚农村地区疗效试验方案

Sophie E. Moore, Samantha McCann, Ousman Jarjou, Muhammed A. Danjo, B. Sonko, Ebrima A. Sise, Samuel Beaton, Daniel Tod, Greg Fegan, Andrew M. Prentice
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摘要

背景 生命早期的营养不良会对儿童的生长和认知发展产生有害且不可逆转的影响。许多旨在改善婴儿期营养状况的干预措施的效果都令人失望或不尽如人意,其中一个共同的特点就是没有尝试在婴儿出生后的头六个月为其提供营养补充剂。有越来越多的证据表明,这个年龄段的婴儿存在微量营养素缺乏症,同时有强有力的证据表明,生长和发育缺陷在六个月前就已开始,因此需要重新关注婴儿的微量营养素状况。方法 本研究是一项五臂、双盲、安慰剂对照、随机疗效试验,在微量营养素缺乏率较高的冈比亚农村地区,为母亲(孕期或孕期和哺乳期)和婴儿(8 到 6 个月大)补充微量营养素。600 名孕妇(妊娠期小于 20 周)将被纳入五个试验组中的一个,并在产后跟踪观察 12 个月。主要结果是婴儿在 6 个月时的大脑发育情况,次要结果是婴儿在 12 个月时的微量营养素状况、生长情况和神经认知发育情况。讨论 这项新颖的研究将确定改善婴儿期微量营养素状况的最有效方法,并评估对婴儿发育结果的影响,为未来的有效性试验和政策建议提供证据基础。试验注册ISRCTN注册表(ISRCTN15063705,09/07/2021);泛非临床试验注册表(PACTR202201552774601,21/01/2022)。
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Improving infant Neurocognitive Development and Growth Outcomes with micronutrients (INDiGO): A protocol for an efficacy trial in rural Gambia
Background Undernutrition during the early years of life has a harmful and irreversible impact on child growth and cognitive development. Many of the interventions tested to improve outcomes across infancy have had disappointing or inconsistent impact, a common feature being the absence of any attempt to provide nutritional supplements to infants during the first six months. With increasing evidence of micronutrient deficiencies in this age group, alongside strong evidence that growth and developmental deficits begin before six months, a renewed focus on the micronutrient status of infants is required. Methods This study is a five-arm, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised efficacy trial of micronutrient supplementation to mothers (during pregnancy or pregnancy and lactation) and infants (Day 8 to six months of age) in rural Gambia, where rates of micronutrient deficiencies are high. 600 pregnant women (<20 weeks gestation) will be enrolled into one of five trial arms and followed to 12 months post-partum. The primary outcome will be infant brain development at six months, with micronutrient status, growth and neurocognitive development to 12 months as secondary outcomes. Discussion This novel research will identify the most efficacious way of improving micronutrient status in infancy, and assess impact on infant developmental outcomes, providing an evidence base for future effectiveness trials and policy recommendations. Trial registration ISRCTN registry (ISRCTN15063705, 09/07/2021); Pan African Clinical Trials Registry (PACTR202201552774601, 21/01/2022).
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