Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
200

Summary

Conditions
  • Growth Failure
  • Malnutrition
  • Protein Malnutrition
  • Stunting
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: N/AIntervention Model: Single Group AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Participating mothers nursing children age 0-3 months at enrollment will receive 3 months of treatment with one packet of Plumpy'Mum.Masking: None (Open Label)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 125 years
Gender
Only males

Description

In severely under-resourced areas of the world, such as the Haydom area in Tanzania (TZ), poor nutrition continues contributes to worsened health-related outcomes including growth and cognitive development. Haydom Global Health Research Center at Haydom Lutheran Hospital in north central Tanzania re...

In severely under-resourced areas of the world, such as the Haydom area in Tanzania (TZ), poor nutrition continues contributes to worsened health-related outcomes including growth and cognitive development. Haydom Global Health Research Center at Haydom Lutheran Hospital in north central Tanzania represents an important rural setting for performing high-quality medical research in sub-Saharan Africa. Through ongoing work in the area around Haydom in the MAL-ED and ELICIT studies, we have been attempting to improve outcomes for children in an area of severe poverty, where there is considerable malnutrition and potential sequelae: 1. Growth deficits: Poor weight gain and linear growth failure in childhood are often seen as surrogates for overall health status; persistently poor growth has implications for future work potential and lower human capital. There was a high degree of stunting in the Haydom site of Tanzanian in the multi-country observational MAL-ED study, which found that the Haydom site had the highest prevalence of stunting among all the MAL-ED sites. This degree of stunting is likely multi-factorial, though one contributor is food availability, as rates of key factors such as birthweight vary significantly according to food availability. An interim analysis of data from our ongoing ELICIT study (for Early Life Interventions for Childhood Developmental delays: Perhaps there is no more important outcome (with the exception of mortality) than the cognitive, social and emotional development of a population, with clear extensions to human capital, economic productivity and quality of life in communities. Indeed, many observational and interventional studies (including the current study) follow growth as an outcome because of its overall association with cognitive development. In MAL-ED assessments, TZ children had fewer words than seen among US children. The reasons for potential developmental delays are multifactorial, but again malnutrition may play an important role. Studies in other developing areas have demonstrated improved cognitive development following delivery of nutrition support. Nutritional Causes of Poor Growth While the causes of the stunting and developmental delays are multifactorial, a potential contributor is early-life nutritional deficiencies, including inadequate dietary protein. One likely source of low protein delivery to infants is from low intake among area mothers during lactation, with potential effects on breast milk protein content and child weight gain. Indeed, the first six months of life represents a critical phase of nutrition for the developing infant, in which all (or nearly all) nutrition is delivered through the mother's breast milk. However, it is not known whether protein supplementation during lactation in this setting would improve childhood growth and reduce stunting-or whether any improvements in growth would continue beyond the period of maternal supplementation. Assessing the potential effect of mothers receiving protein supplementation-using a balanced energy protein supplement-on childhood growth and development would require an approach that incorporates an effective distribution network, a means of assessing adherence, and a thorough knowledge of community acceptance, as well as accurate measures of endpoints on a large enough sample to be powered to detect reasonable changes in linear growth. In order to assess the feasibility of this type of approach on a smaller scale (which could be later be expanded), the current pilot project will evaluate the effectiveness of distribution and adherence on approximately 100 mother/child dyads. If this experimental approach is feasible and shows promise, it is our hope to follow it with a larger study that offers more definitive evidence of efficacy.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT04565314
Collaborators
  • Haydom Lutheran Hospital
  • Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Mark D DeBoer, MD, MSc, MCR University of Virginia