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Effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age on cause-specific early and late infant mortality in rural Ghana: ObaapaVitA double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial

Effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age on cause-specific early and late infant mortality in rural Ghana: ObaapaVitA double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial
Effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age on cause-specific early and late infant mortality in rural Ghana: ObaapaVitA double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial
Objectives: to assess the effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age in Ghana on cause- and age-specific infant mortality. In addition, because of recently published studies from Guinea Bissau, effects on infant mortality by sex and season were assessed.

Design: double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial.

Setting: 7 contiguous districts in the Brong Ahafo region of Ghana.

Participants: all women of reproductive age (15–45 years) resident in the study area randomised by cluster of residence. All live born infants from 1 June 2003 to 30 September 2008 followed up through 4-weekly home visits.

Intervention: weekly low-dose (25 000 IU) vitamin A.

Main outcome measures: early infant mortality (1–5 months); late infant mortality (6–11 months); infection-specific infant mortality (0–11 months).

Results: 1086 clusters, 62 662 live births, 52 574 infant-years and 3268 deaths yielded HRs (95% CIs) comparing weekly vitamin A with placebo: 1.04 (0.88 to 1.05) early infant mortality; 0.99 (0.84 to 1.18) late infant mortality; 1.03 (0.92 to 1.16) infection-specific infant mortality. There was no evidence of modification of the effect of vitamin A supplementation on infant mortality by sex (Wald statistic =0.07, p=0.80) or season (Wald statistic =0.03, p=0.86).

Conclusions: this is the largest analysis of cause of infant deaths from Africa to date. Weekly vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age has no beneficial or deleterious effect on the causes of infant death to age 6 or 12 months in rural Ghana.

Trial registration number: http://ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00211341.
2044-6055
Edmond, Karen
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Hurt, Lisa
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Fenty, Justin
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Amenga-Etego, Seeba
229fca24-da1c-4cea-ad14-cd5885d767e8
Zandoh, Charles
c823fd4a-2cd2-4ba0-a604-7e37106fb9f3
Hurt, Chris
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Danso, Samuel
2054070b-8ef7-4d5a-a869-0c6585c8cf50
Tawiah, Charlotte
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Hill, Zelee
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ten Asbroek, Augustinus H.A.
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Owusu-Agyei, Seth
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Campbell, Oona
15e8c090-bed3-4087-abf9-dc90dcba85a2
Kirkwood, Betty R.
1e825a6a-fc9f-4499-b5cb-4898d40da134
et al.
Edmond, Karen
e3781f50-387f-4107-a15b-8f1a8773e420
Hurt, Lisa
95896c0d-415a-41da-98d4-2ea7c9b32cb7
Fenty, Justin
a0b75276-6879-458c-83df-12263d888831
Amenga-Etego, Seeba
229fca24-da1c-4cea-ad14-cd5885d767e8
Zandoh, Charles
c823fd4a-2cd2-4ba0-a604-7e37106fb9f3
Hurt, Chris
bf8b37a0-8f08-4b47-b3f3-6fc65f7ab87f
Danso, Samuel
2054070b-8ef7-4d5a-a869-0c6585c8cf50
Tawiah, Charlotte
9baec21d-11bf-4024-ab11-5952d6d5534b
Hill, Zelee
da1696ab-4dc4-4476-8154-870c87567f6e
ten Asbroek, Augustinus H.A.
065e7ee9-85bb-4e2f-9f55-6de2c74d8228
Owusu-Agyei, Seth
89f0abc2-0756-480e-962d-a4b01d7c04dc
Campbell, Oona
15e8c090-bed3-4087-abf9-dc90dcba85a2
Kirkwood, Betty R.
1e825a6a-fc9f-4499-b5cb-4898d40da134

Edmond, Karen, Hurt, Lisa and Fenty, Justin , et al. (2012) Effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age on cause-specific early and late infant mortality in rural Ghana: ObaapaVitA double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial. BMJ Open, 2 (1), [e000658]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2011-000658).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: to assess the effect of vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age in Ghana on cause- and age-specific infant mortality. In addition, because of recently published studies from Guinea Bissau, effects on infant mortality by sex and season were assessed.

Design: double-blind, cluster-randomised, placebo-controlled trial.

Setting: 7 contiguous districts in the Brong Ahafo region of Ghana.

Participants: all women of reproductive age (15–45 years) resident in the study area randomised by cluster of residence. All live born infants from 1 June 2003 to 30 September 2008 followed up through 4-weekly home visits.

Intervention: weekly low-dose (25 000 IU) vitamin A.

Main outcome measures: early infant mortality (1–5 months); late infant mortality (6–11 months); infection-specific infant mortality (0–11 months).

Results: 1086 clusters, 62 662 live births, 52 574 infant-years and 3268 deaths yielded HRs (95% CIs) comparing weekly vitamin A with placebo: 1.04 (0.88 to 1.05) early infant mortality; 0.99 (0.84 to 1.18) late infant mortality; 1.03 (0.92 to 1.16) infection-specific infant mortality. There was no evidence of modification of the effect of vitamin A supplementation on infant mortality by sex (Wald statistic =0.07, p=0.80) or season (Wald statistic =0.03, p=0.86).

Conclusions: this is the largest analysis of cause of infant deaths from Africa to date. Weekly vitamin A supplementation in women of reproductive age has no beneficial or deleterious effect on the causes of infant death to age 6 or 12 months in rural Ghana.

Trial registration number: http://ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT00211341.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 November 2011
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 January 2012
Published date: 4 January 2012

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488428
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488428
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 26ac0988-bfd6-49a0-933c-4a89ccf6976c
ORCID for Chris Hurt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1206-8355

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Date deposited: 22 Mar 2024 17:38
Last modified: 23 Mar 2024 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Karen Edmond
Author: Lisa Hurt
Author: Justin Fenty
Author: Seeba Amenga-Etego
Author: Charles Zandoh
Author: Chris Hurt ORCID iD
Author: Samuel Danso
Author: Charlotte Tawiah
Author: Zelee Hill
Author: Augustinus H.A. ten Asbroek
Author: Seth Owusu-Agyei
Author: Oona Campbell
Author: Betty R. Kirkwood
Corporate Author: et al.

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