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Characteristics that modify the effect of small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplementation on child growth: an individual participant data meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

Published Web Location

https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.02.05.21251105v1
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Abstract

ABSTRACT

Background

Meta-analyses have demonstrated that small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements (SQ-LNS) reduce stunting and wasting prevalence among infants and young children. Identification of subgroups who benefit most from SQ-LNS may facilitate program design.

Objective

Our objective was to identify study-level and individual-level modifiers of the effect of SQ-LNS on child growth outcomes.

Methods

We conducted a two-stage meta-analysis of individual participant data from 14 randomized controlled trials of SQ-LNS provided to children 6 to 24 months of age in low- and middle-income countries (n=37,066). We generated study-specific and subgroup estimates of SQ-LNS vs. control and pooled the estimates using fixed-effects models, with random-effects models as sensitivity analyses. We used random effects meta-regression to examine study-level effect modifiers. Heterogeneity was assessed using I 2 and Tau 2 statistics. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to examine whether results differed depending on inclusion criteria for arms within trials and types of comparisons.

Results

SQ-LNS provision decreased stunting (length-for-age z-score < −2) by 12% (relative reduction), wasting (weight-for-length (WLZ) z-score < −2) by 14%, low mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC < 125 mm or MUACZ < −2) by 18%, acute malnutrition (WLZ < −2 or MUAC < 125 mm) by 14%, underweight (weight-for-age z-score < −2) by 13%, and small head size (head-circumference z-score < −2) by 9%. Effects of SQ-LNS on growth outcomes generally did not differ by study-level characteristics including region, stunting burden, malaria prevalence, sanitation, water quality, duration of supplementation, frequency of contact or average reported compliance with SQ-LNS. Effects of SQ-LNS on stunting, wasting, low MUAC and small head size were greater among girls than among boys; effects on stunting, underweight and low MUAC were greater among later-born (vs. first-born) children; and effects on wasting and acute malnutrition were greater among children in households with improved (vs. unimproved) sanitation. Results were similar across sensitivity analyses.

Conclusions

The positive impact of SQ-LNS on growth is apparent across a wide variety of study-level contexts. Policy-makers and program planners should consider including SQ-LNS in the mix of interventions to prevent both stunting and wasting. This study was registered at www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO as CRD42019146592.

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