Maternal Supplementation Prevents Preterm Births

Maternal micronutrient supplementation is able to reduce preterm births and low birth weights, according to a study involving over 44,000 Bangladeshi pregnancies.

AsianScientist (Jan. 4, 2015) – Although maternal micronutrient supplementation does not reduce infant mortality, it results in significant reductions in preterm birth and low birth weight. The study, involving over 44,000 pregnant women in Bangladesh, has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association.

Multiple micronutrient deficiencies are common among pregnant women in resource-poor regions of the world, especially in southern Asia. Coexisting with poor maternal nutrition across the region are excessive burdens of low birth weight, preterm birth, small size for gestational age, stillbirth, infant mortality and maternal mortality.

Gestational micronutrient deficiencies may contribute to avoidable adverse birth outcomes. However, data for effects of antenatal (before birth) multiple micronutrient supplementation on longer-term infant mortality are sparse for guiding policies in southern Asia.

A team led by Dr. Keith P. West Jr., of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health conducted a study in which pregnant women in Bangladesh (n = 44,567) were randomly assigned to receive supplements containing 15 micronutrients or iron-folic acid alone, taken daily from early pregnancy to 12 weeks postpartum.

Among the 22,405 pregnancies in the multiple micronutrient group and the 22,162 pregnancies in the iron-folic acid group, there were 14,374 and 14,142 live-born infants, respectively, included in the analysis. At six months, multiple micronutrients did not significantly reduce infant mortality; there were 764 deaths (54.0 per 1,000 live births) in the iron-folic acid group and 741 deaths (51.6 per 1,000 live births) in the multiple micronutrient group.

However, multiple micronutrient supplementation resulted in a non-statistically significant reduction in stillbirths (43.1 vs 48.2 per 1,000 births) and significant reductions in preterm births (18.6 vs 21.8 per 100 live births) and low birth weight (40.2 vs 45.7 per 100 live births).

“Our study’s null finding is in agreement with a small number of trials that have provided an antenatal multiple micronutrient vs iron supplement, with or without folic acid, and found no effect on neonatal mortality,” the authors write.

“Reasons for a null effect on postnatal survival after improvement in some birth outcomes with antenatal multiple micronutrient supplement use remain unknown but may reflect a complex interplay between maternal and newborn sizes and differential responses to supplementation by causes of death.”

The article can be found at: West et al. (2014) Effect of Maternal Multiple Micronutrient vs Iron–Folic Acid Supplementation on Infant Mortality and Adverse Birth Outcomes in Rural Bangladesh: The JiVitA-3 Randomized Trial.

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Source: JAMA; Photo: Shutterstock.
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