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Child Health, Agriculture and Integrated Nutrition (CHAIN): protocol for a randomised controlled trial of improved infant and young child feeding in rural Zimbabwe

Child Health, Agriculture and Integrated Nutrition (CHAIN): protocol for a randomised controlled trial of improved infant and young child feeding in rural Zimbabwe
Child Health, Agriculture and Integrated Nutrition (CHAIN): protocol for a randomised controlled trial of improved infant and young child feeding in rural Zimbabwe

INTRODUCTION: Over one-quarter of children in sub-Saharan Africa are stunted; however, commercial supplements only partially meet child nutrient requirements, cannot be sustainably produced, and do not resolve physiological barriers to adequate nutrition (eg, inflammation, microbiome dysbiosis and metabolic dysfunction). Redesigning current infant and young child feeding (IYCF) interventions using locally available foods to improve intake, uptake and utilisation of nutrients could ameliorate underlying pathogenic pathways and improve infant growth during the critical period of complementary feeding, to reduce the global burden of stunting. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Child Health Agriculture Integrated Nutrition is an open-label, individual household randomised trial comparing the effects of IYCF versus 'IYCF-plus' on nutrient intake during infancy. The IYCF intervention comprises behaviour change modules to promote infant nutrition delivered by community health workers, plus small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements from 6 to 12 months of age which previously reduced stunting at 18 months of age by ~20% in rural Zimbabwe. The 'IYCF-plus' intervention provides these components plus powdered NUA-45 biofortified sugar beans, whole egg powder, moringa leaf powder and provitamin A maize. The trial will enrol 192 infants between 5 and 6 months of age in Shurugwi district, Zimbabwe. Research nurses will collect data plus blood, urine and stool samples at baseline (5-6 months of age) and endline (9-11 months of age). The primary outcome is energy intake, measured by multipass 24-hour dietary recall at 9-11 months of age. Secondary outcomes include nutrient intake, anthropometry and haemoglobin concentration. Nested laboratory substudies will evaluate the gut microbiome, environmental enteric dysfunction, metabolic phenotypes and innate immune function. Qualitative substudies will explore the acceptability and feasibility of the IYCF-plus intervention among participants and community stakeholders, and the effects of migration on food production and consumption. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04874688) and was approved by the Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe (MRCZ/A/2679) with the final version 1.4 approved on 20 August 2021, following additional amendments. Dissemination of trial results will be conducted through the Community Engagement Advisory Board in the study district and through national-level platforms. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04874688.

Community child health, Immunology, Nutrition, Nutritional support, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
2044-6055
e056435
Smith, Laura E.
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Chagwena, Dexter T.
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Bourke, Claire
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Robertson, Ruairi
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Fernando, Shamiso
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Tavengwa, Naume V.
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Cairns, Jill
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Ndhlela, Thokozile
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Matumbu, Exhibit
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Brown, Tim
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Datta, Kavita
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Mutasa, Batsirai
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Tengende, Alice
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Chidhanguro, Dzivaidzo
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Langhaug, Lisa
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Makanza, Maggie
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Chasekwa, Bernard
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Mutasa, Kuda
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Swann, Jonathan
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Kelly, Paul
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Ntozini, Robert
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Prendergast, Andrew
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Smith, Laura E.
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Chagwena, Dexter T.
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Bourke, Claire
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Robertson, Ruairi
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Fernando, Shamiso
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Tavengwa, Naume V.
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Cairns, Jill
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Ndhlela, Thokozile
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Matumbu, Exhibit
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Brown, Tim
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Datta, Kavita
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Mutasa, Batsirai
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Tengende, Alice
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Chidhanguro, Dzivaidzo
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Langhaug, Lisa
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Makanza, Maggie
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Chasekwa, Bernard
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Mutasa, Kuda
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Swann, Jonathan
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Kelly, Paul
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Ntozini, Robert
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Prendergast, Andrew
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Smith, Laura E., Chagwena, Dexter T., Bourke, Claire, Robertson, Ruairi, Fernando, Shamiso, Tavengwa, Naume V., Cairns, Jill, Ndhlela, Thokozile, Matumbu, Exhibit, Brown, Tim, Datta, Kavita, Mutasa, Batsirai, Tengende, Alice, Chidhanguro, Dzivaidzo, Langhaug, Lisa, Makanza, Maggie, Chasekwa, Bernard, Mutasa, Kuda, Swann, Jonathan, Kelly, Paul, Ntozini, Robert and Prendergast, Andrew (2022) Child Health, Agriculture and Integrated Nutrition (CHAIN): protocol for a randomised controlled trial of improved infant and young child feeding in rural Zimbabwe. BMJ Open, 12 (12), e056435. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2021-056435).

Record type: Article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Over one-quarter of children in sub-Saharan Africa are stunted; however, commercial supplements only partially meet child nutrient requirements, cannot be sustainably produced, and do not resolve physiological barriers to adequate nutrition (eg, inflammation, microbiome dysbiosis and metabolic dysfunction). Redesigning current infant and young child feeding (IYCF) interventions using locally available foods to improve intake, uptake and utilisation of nutrients could ameliorate underlying pathogenic pathways and improve infant growth during the critical period of complementary feeding, to reduce the global burden of stunting. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Child Health Agriculture Integrated Nutrition is an open-label, individual household randomised trial comparing the effects of IYCF versus 'IYCF-plus' on nutrient intake during infancy. The IYCF intervention comprises behaviour change modules to promote infant nutrition delivered by community health workers, plus small-quantity lipid-based nutrient supplements from 6 to 12 months of age which previously reduced stunting at 18 months of age by ~20% in rural Zimbabwe. The 'IYCF-plus' intervention provides these components plus powdered NUA-45 biofortified sugar beans, whole egg powder, moringa leaf powder and provitamin A maize. The trial will enrol 192 infants between 5 and 6 months of age in Shurugwi district, Zimbabwe. Research nurses will collect data plus blood, urine and stool samples at baseline (5-6 months of age) and endline (9-11 months of age). The primary outcome is energy intake, measured by multipass 24-hour dietary recall at 9-11 months of age. Secondary outcomes include nutrient intake, anthropometry and haemoglobin concentration. Nested laboratory substudies will evaluate the gut microbiome, environmental enteric dysfunction, metabolic phenotypes and innate immune function. Qualitative substudies will explore the acceptability and feasibility of the IYCF-plus intervention among participants and community stakeholders, and the effects of migration on food production and consumption. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04874688) and was approved by the Medical Research Council of Zimbabwe (MRCZ/A/2679) with the final version 1.4 approved on 20 August 2021, following additional amendments. Dissemination of trial results will be conducted through the Community Engagement Advisory Board in the study district and through national-level platforms. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT04874688.

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Published date: 30 December 2022
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.
Keywords: Community child health, Immunology, Nutrition, Nutritional support, QUALITATIVE RESEARCH

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475741
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475741
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: eb914178-f4f2-40d6-b186-877344f2f10a
ORCID for Jonathan Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2023 16:45
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Laura E. Smith
Author: Dexter T. Chagwena
Author: Claire Bourke
Author: Ruairi Robertson
Author: Shamiso Fernando
Author: Naume V. Tavengwa
Author: Jill Cairns
Author: Thokozile Ndhlela
Author: Exhibit Matumbu
Author: Tim Brown
Author: Kavita Datta
Author: Batsirai Mutasa
Author: Alice Tengende
Author: Dzivaidzo Chidhanguro
Author: Lisa Langhaug
Author: Maggie Makanza
Author: Bernard Chasekwa
Author: Kuda Mutasa
Author: Jonathan Swann ORCID iD
Author: Paul Kelly
Author: Robert Ntozini
Author: Andrew Prendergast

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