Interventions to reduce post-acute consequences of diarrheal disease in children: a systematic review.
Study Design
- Studientyp
- Systematic Review
- Population
- Children under 15 in LMICs with diarrhea
- Dauer
- 1.0 weeks
- Intervention
- Interventions to reduce post-acute consequences of diarrheal disease in children: a systematic review. None
- Vergleichsgruppe
- None
- Primärer Endpunkt
- Post-diarrheal morbidity (growth, recurrence)
- Wirkungsrichtung
- Mixed
- Verzerrungsrisiko
- Unclear
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although acute diarrhea often leads to acute dehydration and electrolyte imbalance, children with diarrhea also suffer long term morbidity, including recurrent or prolonged diarrhea, loss of weight, and linear growth faltering. They are also at increased risk of post-acute mortality. The objective of this systematic review was to identify interventions that address these longer term consequences of diarrhea. METHODS: We searched Medline for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of interventions conducted in low- and middle-income countries, published between 1980 and 2016 that included children under 15 years of age with diarrhea and follow-up of at least 7 days. Effect measures were summarized by intervention. PRISMA guidelines were followed. RESULTS: Among 314 otherwise eligible RCTs, 65% were excluded because follow-up did not extend beyond 7 days. Forty-six trials were included, the majority of which (59%) were conducted in Southeast Asia (41% in Bangladesh alone). Most studies were small, 76% included less than 200 participants. Interventions included: therapeutic zinc alone (28.3%) or in combination with vitamin A (4.3%), high protein diets (19.6%), probiotics (10.9%), lactose free diets (10.9%), oral rehydration solution (ORS) formulations (8.7%), dietary supplements (6.5%), other dietary interventions (6.5%), and antimicrobials (4.3%). Prolonged or recurrent diarrhea was the most commonly reported outcome, and was assessed in ORS, probiotic, vitamin A, and zinc trials with no consistent benefit observed. Seven trials evaluated mortality, with follow-up times ranging from 8 days to 2 years. Only a single trial found a mortality benefit (therapeutic zinc). There were mixed results for dietary interventions affecting growth and diarrhea outcomes in the post-acute period. CONCLUSION: Despite the significant post-acute mortality and morbidity associated with diarrheal episodes, there is sparse evidence evaluating the effects of interventions to decrease these sequelae. Adequately powered trials with extended follow-up are needed to identify effective interventions to prevent post-acute diarrhea outcomes.
Zusammenfassung
Despite the significant post-acute mortality and morbidity associated with diarrheal episodes, there is sparse evidence evaluating the effects of interventions to decrease these sequelae, and adequate powered trials with extended follow-up are needed to identify effective interventions to prevent post-ACute diarrhea outcomes.
Full Text
Pavlinac et al. BMC Public Health (2018) 18:208 DOI 10.1186/s12889-018-5092-7
Interventions to reduce post-acute consequences of diarrheal disease in children: a systematic review
Patricia B. Pavlinac1*, Rebecca L. Brander2, Hannah E. Atlas1, Grace C. John-Stewart1,2,3,4, Donna M. Denno1,3,5 and Judd L. Walson1,2,3,4
Abstract
Background: Although acute diarrhea often leads to acute dehydration and electrolyte imbalance, children with diarrhea also suffer long term morbidity, including recurrent or prolonged diarrhea, loss of weight, and linear growth faltering. They are also at increased risk of post-acute mortality. The objective of this systematic review was to identify interventions that address these longer term consequences of diarrhea. Methods: We searched Medline for randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of interventions conducted in low- and middleincome countries, published between 1980 and 2016 that included children under 15 years of age with diarrhea and followup of at least 7 days. Effect measures were summarized by intervention. PRISMA guidelines were followed. Results: Among 314 otherwise eligible RCTs, 65% were excluded because follow-up did not extend beyond 7 days. Forty-six trials were included, the majority of which (59%) were conducted in Southeast Asia (41% in Bangladesh alone). Most studies were small, 76% included less than 200 participants. Interventions included: therapeutic zinc alone (28.3%) or in combination with vitamin A (4.3%), high protein diets (19.6%), probiotics (10.9%), lactose free diets (10.9%), oral rehydration solution (ORS) formulations (8.7%), dietary supplements (6.5%), other dietary interventions (6.5%), and antimicrobials (4.3%). Prolonged or recurrent diarrhea was the most commonly reported outcome, and was assessed in ORS, probiotic, vitamin A, and zinc trials with no consistent benefit observed. Seven trials evaluated mortality, with follow-up times ranging from 8 days to 2 years. Only a single trial found a mortality benefit (therapeutic zinc). There were mixed results for dietary interventions affecting growth and diarrhea outcomes in the post-acute period. Conclusion: Despite the significant post-acute mortality and morbidity associated with diarrheal episodes, there is sparse evidence evaluating the effects of interventions to decrease these sequelae. Adequately powered trials with extended follow-up are needed to identify effective interventions to prevent post-acute diarrhea outcomes. Keywords: Pediatric diarrhea management, Child growth, Diarrhea interventions, Child mortality, Long-term sequelae of diarrhea
Background
Close to 600,000 children die each year from diarrheal disease, the majority in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) [1]. Children with a single episode of moderateto-severe diarrhea (MSD) experience an 8.5-fold higher risk of dying in the 60-days following the episode compared to age-matched healthy children, despite standard
* Correspondence: [email protected]
Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA Full list of author information is available at the end of the article
diarrhea case management including rehydration and zinc [2]. A verbal autopsy study conducted in 7 LMICs found that 55.6% of pediatric diarrhea deaths occurred in children who had been rehydrated [3]. Although rehydration and zinc have resulted in millions of lives saved from diarrhea, they may be insufficient to prevent all diarrheaassociated mortality.
The consequences of diarrhea extend beyond acute dehydration and electrolyte imbalance. Over two-thirds of deaths associated with diarrhea occur more than 7 days after presentation [2]. An episode of MSD is also
© The Author(s). 2018 Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
associated with subsequent loss of length/height-for-age z-score (LAZ/HAZ), a measure of chronic malnutrition [2, 4]. Undernutrition is linked to half of all diarrheaassociated mortality and is associated with other longterm outcomes including reduced school attendance and future earning potential [2, 5, 6].
While mortality from diarrheal diseases has declined since the 1990’s, incidence rates have remained stable and there is increasing recognition of the morbidity, disability, and long-term consequences associated with diarrhea. We conducted a systematic review to identify and summarize randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of diarrhea management interventions to determine effects on death, anthropometric status, and prevalence and incidence of diarrhea in the post-acute period.
Methods
The systematic review followed PRISMA guidelines. We searched Medline for English-language RCTs published between January 1, 1980 and October 31, 2016 conducted among children under 15 years of age presenting with diarrhea (all diarrhea definitions accepted) at the time of treatment. Specifically, we searched for trials evaluating 1 of the following interventions: antiemetics, antibiotics, antiprotozoals, antisecretories, dietary supplements, intravenous hydration therapy, oral rehydration therapy, probiotics, prebiotics, lactose replacement, and therapeutic zinc. These interventions were chosen based on consultation with experts in the field. The search terms used were as follows:
((((((((((((antibiotic OR antiinfective OR anti-infective OR antimicrobial OR antiparasitic OR anti-parasitic OR antiprotozoa* OR anti-protozoa* OR ciprofloxacin OR erythromycin OR metronidazole OR antiemetic* OR anti-emetic OR anti-vomit* OR antidiarrheal OR secretoinhibit* OR antipropulsive OR antisecret* OR antisecret OR breast* OR formula* OR milk OR wean* OR treatment OR management OR “amylose maize starch” OR hams OR lams OR prebiotics OR “resistant starch” OR bifidobacter* OR lactobacill* OR lactococc* OR microbi* OR probiotic* OR fluid OR intravenous OR IV OR ORS OR “oral rehydration salt” OR ORT OR “oral rehydration therapy” OR polymer OR rehydration OR minerals OR zinc)))) AND (“1980/01/01”[Date - Publication]: “2016/10/31”[Date - Publication])) AND (((“bloody stool” OR diarrh* OR dysentery OR gastroenterit*))))) AND ((((clinical trial) OR placebo-controlled trial) OR randomized controlled trial))))) NOT cancer) NOT antibiotic associated diarrhea)
Filters: Clinical Trial; Humans; English; Child: birth18 years
We excluded studies in 2 steps. The first step aimed to exclude trials that did not address the populations or interventions of interest. Specifically, studies conducted in high-income countries (as defined by the World Bank
as of June 2015) [7], those that did not include children with diarrhea at enrollment, utilized a design other than an RCT, or did not present individual-level outcome data were excluded in the first round. The second round excluded trials with insufficient follow up (less than 7 days) and those that lacked outcome data on mortality, length/height, LAZ/HAZ, weight, weight-for-age z-score (WAZ), weight-for-height z-score (WHZ), mid upper arm circumference (MUAC), or diarrhea presence at a pre-specified follow-up point ≥7 days after enrollment. Although weight may be misclassified during diarrhea illness due to fluid loss, in the context of an RCT, groups were assumed to be balanced with regard to hydration status. Therefore, weight, WAZ, and WHZ were considered valid outcomes. Diarrhea duration (other than presence of diarrhea at a pre-specified time point beyond 7-days) and stool output were not included as outcomes because they were considered intermediate to the outcomes of interest in this review.
All titles and abstracts were screened by 2 reviewers (PBP and HEA) and abstracts of agreed-upon titles were examined for inclusion. Full texts of agreedupon abstracts were reviewed for inclusion by RLB and HEA with final input from PBP. The following study-specific information was abstracted from included trials: intervention, control group, population, dates of enrollment, sample size, duration of follow up, reported outcomes, and data on effect sizes of relevant outcomes, and associated confidence intervals (CIs). Details on data abstraction and calculations are provided in the supplementary material for this manuscript (Additional file 1).
A modified Grading of Recommendations Assessment Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach was developed to assess study design elements including sample size, number of participants lost to follow up or withdrawn from the study, and blinding and allocation concealment methods to evaluate the quality of studies. We did not assess the GRADE elements of directness or consistency, as these elements are specific to results reported within a given intervention and outcome category and this review assessed multiple interventions and outcomes. All trials started with 4 points because all were randomized controlled trials and 1 point was deducted for each of the following elements: sparse data (< 200 trial participants), > 5% loss-to-follow-up or withdraws, or lack of double-blinding. Reviewers (HA and RB) applied the modified GRADE system included in this review and categorized each study as high quality (4 points), moderate (3 points), low (2 points), or very low (1 point) based on their final score. In addition to the elements required for GRADE, from included trials we abstracted whether or not a primary endpoint was declared (and whether the primary endpoint was 1 of the endpoints included in this
review) and any mention of power calculations for included outcomes.
Results
The Medline search returned 2815 titles, of which 693 abstracts and 432 full texts were reviewed, and 385 excluded based on full-text review (Fig. 1). Among the 314 studies that were eligible based on study location, design, and population (included based on first exclusion step), most (205 [65.2%]) were excluded for failure to meet our criteria for length of follow up (7 days or more) and 51 (16.2%) were excluded because no outcomes of interest were reported in the second exclusion phase.
Forty-six trials were included in this review, the majority (27 studies [58.7%]) of which were conducted in the WHO-classified Southeast Asia region [8–34], with 19 (70.4%) conducted in Bangladesh alone (Table 1). Seven studies (15.2%) were conducted in the Americas [35–41], 7 studies (15.2%) reported data from Africa [42–48], 2 from the Eastern Mediterranean (Pakistan) [49, 50] and 2 from Europe (Turkey) [51, 52]. One study was conducted in 3 countries (Ethiopia, Pakistan, and India) [53]. The majority of the trials were conducted in inpatient settings (35 studies, 76.1%). Five (10.9%) trials were communitybased, and the remaining 6 (13.0%) were conducted in outpatient settings. The most common interventions included therapeutic zinc (15 studies [32.6%], 2 of which was assessed in the same trial as vitamin A), and high
protein diets (9 studies [19.6%]). Probiotics were assessed in 5 studies (10.9%), and 5 trials evaluated lactose-free diets (10.9%). Four were trials of ORS formulations (8.7%), and 3 (6.5%) trials evaluated dietary supplements, including dietary fiber (2 studies), and glutamine (1 study). Three (6.5%) trials were of other dietary interventions, a semi-elemental diet and 2, 3-armed trials evaluated readyto-use therapeutic food (RUTF) or micronutrient powder. Only 2 (4.3%) of the trials that fit our inclusion criteria evaluated antimicrobial treatments (1 antibiotic and 1 antiprotozoal). We did not find any trials of intravenous (IV) rehydration, antisecretory agents, or antiemetic agents that met our inclusion criteria. The sample size of included studies ranged from 18 to 8070 and only 11 (23.9%) of the 46 trials included more than 200 participants (1 ORS, 2 probiotic, 2 RUTF/micronutrient, 1 vitamin A + zinc, and 5 zinc trials). Just over half of included trials (52.2%) reported power/sample size calculations, the majority of which (11 [48%] of the 23) were powered for the outcome of diarrhea duration/stool output, outcomes not included in this systematic review.
Of the 46 clinical trials evaluated using the modified GRADE system, 6 (13.0%) scored high, 8 (17.4%) scored moderate, 11 (23.9%) scored low, and 21 (45.7%) scored very low (Table 1). The most common deduction was for sparse data (35 [76.1%]), followed by deductions related to follow-up and withdrawals (24 [52.2%]), or blinding/allocation process (21 [45.7%]).
Fig. 1 Flow chart of included trials of diarrhea management interventions
calculations not reported) ΩΦΨVery low
clinical response) ΩModerate
and power Modified
GRADE
score
suspension, twice daily for 3 days Placebo968 daysMortality (powered for outcome of
up data Pre-specified follow up timeRelevant outcomes measured
(150 mg/kg/day) 56 children21 daysMortality (power/sample size
[Ref #] CountryPopulationInterventionComparatorNumber with
follow
Low-dose ampicillin (50 mg/kg/day)High-dose
ampicillin
5 mL of 20 g/L nitazoxanide oral
1980 [8] BangladeshInpatient adults and children with blood,
pus cells, and mucus in stool, 4 or more
take the shape of a container or can be
diarrhea (at least 3 stools per day that
poured) andoocystsCryptosporidium
stools/day, and culture-confirmed
2002 [42] ZambiaInpatient children 12–85 mo with
Table 1Characteristics of included studies
infectionShigella
Antimicrobial Intervention
Reference
Gilman
Amadi
ΩModerate
ΩModerate
ΩϑLow
Dietary Supplements
ORS 1507 daysWeight gain at day 7 from enrollment
(powered for the outcome of stool
output)
Benefiber®) Standard WHO-
non-dysenteric diarrhea WHO ORS with dietary fiber(20 g/L
[26] BangladeshInpatient males 4–18 mo with acute
Alam 2000
[formed stool] at days 7, 8, 9, and 10
end of diarrhea Proportions recovered from diarrhea
(powered for outcome of diarrhea
recovery duration)
62At least 7 days, or until
rice-based diet
control diet:
only, 7 days
equivalent
Calorically
kg to 8 g/kg of pectin supplement)
7 days; or rice-based diet with 1 g/
Rice-based diet with dietary fiber
(250 m/L cooked, green banana,
7 days
mo with persistent diarrhea (> 3 loose
standard), inpatient male infants 5–12
2001 [15] BangladeshSeverely malnourished (< 60% NCHS
stools/day for 14 days), treated with
ciprofloxacin
Rabbani
day, for 7 days Placebo1433 monthsWeight gain at day 30, 60, and 90 from
enrollment (powered for the outcome
of diarrhea duration)
diarrhea Glutamine supplement - 0.3 g/kg/
[51] TurkeyInpatient children 6–24 mo with acute
Yalcin 2004
sample size calculations not reported) ΩΦVery low
ϑΨ
hospital diet 9615 daysWeight and MUAC at day 15 (power/
addition to standard hospital diet Standard
Extra servings of milk (30% of total
daily caloric requirements), in
ΩΦVery low
ϑΨ
ΩΦVery low
ϑΨ
ΩΦΨLow
2221 daysChange in weight, height, WAZ, WHZ,
(power/sample size calculations not
thickness at day 21 from admission
HAZ, MUAC, and triceps skinfold
reported)
6921 daysChange in WHZ, WAZ, and HAZ at day
21 from admission (power/sample size
calculations not reported)
7540 daysPercent change in WAZ and WHZ at 10,
and 40 from admission (power/sample
size calculations not reported)
protein), 21 days
energy from protein), 21 days Standard diet
(7.5% of total
energy from
High protein diet (15% of total
protein), 21 days
energy from protein), 21 days Standard diet
(7.5% of total
energy from
High protein diet (15% of total
hospital diet,
2480 kJ/l for
4960 kJ/l for 10 days Standard
10 days
High calorie and high protein diet,
ΩVery low
ϑΨ
discharge; proportion with nutritional
4116 days minimumWeight at end of intervention and at
(powered for outcome of diarrhea
iiiat end of interventionrecovery
duration)
diet) Standard cultural
(elemental diet
treatment for
or“Vivonex”)
diarrhea
dietary
chicken-based diet, or soy-based
High protein diet (2 groups:
High Protein Diets
mucus in stools), treated with nalidixic
[9] IndiaInpatient children under 5 y/o with
acute dysentery (visible blood and
acid
Datta 1990
culture-confirmeddysentery,Shigella
treated with nalidixic acid or other
[10] BangladeshInpatient children 2–4 y/o with
microbial
Kabir 1992
acute diarrhea and culture-confirmed
spp., treated with nalidixicShigella
[11] BangladeshOutpatient children 2–5 y/o with
acid or pivmecillinam
Kabir 1993
and culture-confirmed, treatedShigella
1997 [12] BangladeshMalnourished (< 80% NCHS median),
bloody or bloody mucoid diarrhea
inpatient children 12–48 mo with
with nalidixic acid
Mazumder
third-degree malnutrition (< 60% NCHS
stools/day for 14 days or longer) and
persistent diarrhea (3 or more loose
median), treated with TMP-SMX or
1997 [36] MexicoInpatient children 3–36 mo with
metronidazole
Nurko
ΩΦVery low
ΩΦVery low
ΩϑVery low
ΩVery low
and power Modified
GRADE
ΦϑΨ
score
ϑΨ
Ψ
Ψ
10426 weeksMortality, median change in weight-SDs
and weight at end of intervention and
measurements (powered for outcome
intervention Change in weight, height, WHZ, WAZ,
1019 monthsDifference in knee-heel length, height
sample size calculations not reported)
compared to admission WAZ (power/
−stunted (LAZ <2 SDs) at 26 weeks
ivand WAZ at 26 weeks; proportions
(power/sample size calculations not
and HAZ at 6 months compared to
7510 daysPercent change in WAZ at day 10,
−underweight (WAZ <2 SDs) and
(powered for outcome of weight
post-intervention measurements
day 90, compared to admission
up data Pre-specified follow up timeRelevant outcomes measured
of diarrhea duration)
reported)
change)
596 months post-
[Ref #] CountryPopulationInterventionComparatorNumber with
follow
energy from protein), 21 days Standard protein
of breastfeeding
porridge + milk
the importance
support: maize
Counseling on
cereal formula
nutritious diet
from protein),
formula, until
formula (4960 kJ/l), 10 days Control milk-
diet (7.5% of
total energy
(2480 kJ/l),
nutritional
Standard
and of a
resolved
diarrhea
10 days
21 days
with a multivitamin tablet (including
diet, and a high protein millet gruel
standard nutritional support + extra
protein to provide 150 kcal/kg/day
depending on age), until diarrhea
mothers report Counseling on the importance of
High calorie & protein milk-cereal
breastfeeding and of a nutritious
and 4.0–5.5 g protein/kg/day (as
nalidixic acid or pivmecillinam High protein diet (15% of total
watery stools/day, for 5 days or more) Enhanced nutritional support:
zinc), until the end of a 7 day
milk or powdered protein,
period without diarrhea
resolved
Table 1Characteristics of included studies(Continued)
persistent diarrhea (4 or more loose or
with acute bloody or mucoid diarrhea,
[13] BangladeshInpatient children 2–60 mo with acute
Bissau Community-based children under 3 y/
Africa Inpatient HIV+ children 6–36 mo with
bloody mucoid diarrhea, treated with
median) inpatient children 12–48 mo
2000 [14] BangladeshMalnourished (< 80% of NCHS
o with persistent diarrhea per
treated with nalidixic acid of
pivmecillinim
2001 [43] Guinnea-
2007 [44] South
Valentiner-
Mazumder
Kabir 1998
Reference
Branth
Rollins
ΩΦVery low
ΩΦVery low
for outcomes of diarrhea duration) ΩΦVery low
ΩΦVery low
ΩΦVery low
ϑΨ
ϑΨ
ϑΨ
ϑΨ
Ψ
to admission weight (power/sample size
1164–6 weeks after dischargeProportion of patients whose weight on
compared to admission weight (power/
21 days 526 weeks post-dischargeWeight increment at 6 weeks (powered
14 days 7314 daysWeight gain at day 7 and 14 compared
each day to day 12 (power/sample size
admission measurements (powered for
outcomes of stool output and diarrhea
diet 1547 days post-dischargeDifference in weight gain and change
sample size calculations not reported)
until end of diarrhea Weight gain at day 7 and at recovery
day 7 was lower than at rehydration;
probability of continuing diarrhea at
in WHZ at discharge compared to
calculations not reported)
calculations not reported)
duration)
57At least 7 days, or
21 days Feeding formula
until recovery or
cereal, sugar, oil,
protein (lactose-
equivalent milk-
and egg white
based formula,
a minimum or
vdiet Yogurt-based
with lactose,
7 days Khitchri and
free), 120 h
milk protein, 120 h Puffed rice
yogurt for
minimum of 7 days Calorically
7 days
stools per day for 14 days) Amino-acid based diet or soy-based
followed by khitchri and yogurt for
[16] IndiaOutpatient children 3–24 moLegume and cereal-based formula
diet, or hydrolyzed protein-based
Soy milk (lactose-free) for 7 days,
Puffed rice cereal, sugar, oil, and
(lactose-free), until recovery or a
24 h period) and dehydration Lactose-free feeding formula,
persistant diarrhea (increased frequeny
children 324 mo, with persistent
diarrhea (4 or more watery stools in a
diarrhea (3 or more liquid stools/
2009 [37] BrazilInpatient male infants 1–30 mo with
persistent diarrhea (3 or more liquid
1991 [50] PakistanOutpatient males 6 mo - 3 yo with
1994 [38] ColombiaInpatient children 1–24 mo with
and reduced consistency lasting
day for 14 days)
2 weeks or more)
1996 [17] IndiaInpatient \
Lactose Free Diet
Bhan 1988
Bhatnagar
de Mattos
Lozano
Bhutta
and power Modified
GRADE
score
up data Pre-specified follow up timeRelevant outcomes measured
[Ref #] CountryPopulationInterventionComparatorNumber with
follow
Table 1Characteristics of included studies(Continued)
Other Dietary Interventions
Reference
Standard hospital diet3821 days
lactalbumin
hydrolyzed
content of
osmolarity
elemental
and high
diet with
Semi-
low
ϑΨLow
ϑΨLow
MUAC < 115 mm, or nutritional oedema
−WHZ <3, MUAC < 115 mm, nutritional
follow up (powered for combined
oedema. Or > 10% weight loss during
outcome of negative nutritional
−: Incidence of WHZ <2,enrollment
during follow up.For malnourished
: Incidence ofchildren at enrollment
follow up. Powered for combined
diarrhea only −6 monthsIncidence of WHZ <2, MUAC <
or nutritional oedema during
diarrhea only 6 monthsFor non-malnourished children at
outcome of negative nutritional
vioutcome)
viioutcome
115 mm,
1171 with
941 with
Eichenberger 1984 [35]BrazilInpatient infants
1–11 mo with
gastroenteritis
with diarrhea
subacute
acute to
An instruction to
an extra meal/
feed the child
day for 14 d
(RUTF), plus instructions to feed the
child an extra meal/day for 14 d; or
Ready-to-use Therapeutic Foods
instructions to feed the child an
micronutrient powder plus
extra meal/day for 14 d
ΩVery low
ΦϑΨ
not reported)
compared to
beginning of
calculations
sample size
Weight at
weight at
(power/
therapy
day 21
children 6–59 mo with diarrhea (3 or
report), malaria, or lower respiratory
nonbloody] per 24 h by mothers’
[45] UgandaNon-malnourished, outpatient
more loose stools [bloody or
tract infections
Kam 2016
van der
An instruction to
an extra meal/
feed the child
day for 14 d
(RUTF), plus instructions to feed the
child an extra meal/day for 14 d; or
Ready-to-use Therapeutic Foods
instructions to feed the child an
micronutrient powder plus
extra meal/day for 14 d
stools [bloody or nonbloody] per 24 h
59 mo with diarrhea (3 or more loose
by mothersreport), malaria, or lower
malnourished outpatient children 6–
[46] NigeriaNon-malnourished or moderately
respiratory tract infections
Kam 2016
van der
ΩΦVery low
size calculations not reported) ΩModerate
ΦΨLow
Ψ
9314 daysWeight at day 14, weight gain at day 14
ORS 187 daysWeight gain at day 7 (power/sample
(power/sample size calculations not
weight gain at day 16 (powered for
based ORS 47116 daysProportion with diarrhea at day 14,
outcomes of stool output, diarrhea
duration and weight gain [70 g])
as percent of enrollment weight
reported)
or standard WHO-ORS Standard diet for
bananas, cereals,
alanine Standard WHO-
management
non-dysenteric diarrhea Glucose based ORSRice-powder
beverages,
and apple
(aerated
diarrhea
sauce)
dehydration Standard WHO-ORS with 30 mmol/L
than 3 watery stools per day) High potassium and chloride ORS,
1997 [21] BangladeshInpatient children 3–35 mo with acute
1983 [39] PanamaInpatient 3 mo - 2 y/o who were well
nourished, with acute diarrhea (more
1991 [40] BrazilInpatient male infants less than 12
mo, with acute diarrhea and
Oral Rehydration Solution Formulations
Santosham
Faruque
Ribeiro
and power Modified
ΩΨLow
GRADE
score
sample size calculations not reported)
starch Rice-based ORS1376 weeksTime to attain 80% of median WLZ
diarrhea at or after day 7 (power/
from enrollment; proportion with
up data Pre-specified follow up timeRelevant outcomes measured
[Ref #] CountryPopulationInterventionComparatorNumber with
follow
based ORS plus amylase resistant
Glucose-based ORS, or Glucose-
Table 1Characteristics of included studies(Continued)
[55] BangladeshSeverely malnourished (< 70% NCHS
standard), inpatient infants 6–60 mo
with acute diarrhea and culture-
confirmedV. cholerae
Alam 2009
Reference
size calculations not reported) ΩΦVery low
ΩϑLow
ϑΨ
placebo 721 monthProportion of patients with diarrhea at
based formula 977 daysWeight gain at day 7 (power/sample
or after day 7 (power/sample size
calculations not reported)
per day (patients 1 yo and older) WHO-ORS and
(lactose and calorically equivalent) Standard milk-
per day (patients < 1 yo) or 500 mg
the previous 24 h) Standard formula fermented withL.
loose stools in the preceding 24 h) WHO-ORS and S. boulardii, 250 mg
andbulgaricusS. thermophilus
2001 [47] AlgeriaInpatient children 3–24 mo with acute
2007 [41] ArgentinaOutpatient children 3 mo - 2 yo, with
watery diarrhea (> 3 loose stools in
acute diarrhea (3 or more liquid or
Boudraa
Villaruel
Probiotics
ΩModerate
ΩModerate
ΩVery low
duration) High
duration) High
ΦΨ
diarrhea at day 7 (powered for outcome
live bacteria) Placebo2076 weeksChange in WHZ at 6 weeks(powered for
diarrhea during follow-up (powered for
outcomes of stool output and diarrhea
syrup only 937 daysWeight at day 7, weight gain at day 7
ixZinc acetate, 15 days, or both Placebo65617 daysProportion with diarrhea at day 7 and
16 (powered for outcome of diarrhea
compared to day 1, proportions with
−wasted (WHZ <2 SD) at 4 weeks,
(10^10 organisms) −Placebo1234 weeksProportions stunted (HAZ <2 SD),
17,938 (10^8 CFU) for 5 days WHO-ORS only12712 daysProportion with diarrhea at day 12
proportion with diarrhea or severe
−underweight (WAZ <2 SD), and
(powered for outcome of diarrhea
outcome of L:M ratio)
of clinical recovery)
duration)
Multivitamin (D,
C, B1 B2 B6)
200,000 for children > 1 yo), or both
acetate, 5 ml twice daily for 7 days),
in the previous 24 h) μ4500g vitamin A, 15 day, 14.2 mg
14 days duration) Multivitamin (D, C, B1 B2 B6) syrup
that take the shape of their container) Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (10^9
and 20 mg elemental zinc (as zinc
watery diarrhea WHO-ORS +lactobacillus reuteri
(100,000 IU for children < 1 yo,
Cryptosporidium infection Lactobacillus rhamnuosus GG
multivitamin syrup with Vit A
2014 [52] TurkeyInpatient children 3–60 mo with acute
acute diarrhea (3 or more liquid stools
2014 [20] IndiaChildren 6 m to 5 years with diarrhea
testing positive for either rotavirus or
diarrhea (more than 3 stools per day
1999 [34] BangladeshInpatient children 6 mo - 2 yo with
2001 [22] BangladeshInpatient children 6 mo - 4 yo with
persistent diarrhea (diarrhea for >
[19] IndiaInpatient infants < 36 mo with
viiiTherapeutic Micronutrients (Vitamin A and Zinc)
Misra 2009
Dinleyici
Faruque
Khatun
Sindhu
Therapeutic Micronutrients (Zinc Alone)
High
ΩΦVery low
ϑ
ΩϑLow
D3, E) only 937At least 120 daysProportion of diarrhea episodes that last
diarrhea episodes taken to a physician
during follow up (power/sample size
longer than 7 days, proportion of
calculations not reported)
syrup (A, B2, B6,
elemental zinc) Multivitamin
stools in the preceding 24 h) Multivitamin syrup (A, B2, B6, D3, E)
plus zinc gluconate (20 mg of
acute diarrhea (at least 4 unformed
1995 [23] IndiaInpatient children 6–35 mo, with
Sazawal
proportion with diarrhea after day 15
14115 daysMortality, weight gain at discharge
(powered for outcome of diarrhea
compared to admission weight,
duration)
(powered for outcome of day 14 weight
day 7 and 14; overall MUAC increment
weightincrement at day 14; MUAC at
7728 daysWeight gain at day 7 and 14; overall
gain)
B2, B3, B6, D, Ca)
only for 14 days
syrup (Vit A, B1,
zinc per day for 14 days Multivitamin
diarrhea Multivitamin syrup (Vit A, B1, B2, B3,
B6, D, Ca) with 20 mg elemental
[24] BangladeshInpatient 3–24 mo with persistent
Roy 1998
- B2, B3, B6, B12,
- C, D, Ca) only for
syrup (Vit A, B1,
Multivitamin
28 days
persistent diarrhea Multivitamin syrup (Vit A, B1, B2, B3,
elemental zinc per kg per day for
B6, B12, C, D, Ca) with 3 mg
28 days
1999 [49] PakistanInpatient children 6–36 mo with
Bhutta
and power Modified
ΦΨLow
ΩϑLow
GRADE
score
8 weeks (power/sample size calculations
(powered for the outcomes of diarrhea
8 weeks, length gain at each week for
acute lower respiratory infections, and
lower respiratory infections incidence,
admission to hospital for diarrhoea or
duration, diarrhea incidence, acute
2910 weeksWeight gain at each week of for
14 days xORS only80702 yearsIncidence of diarrhea, mortality
up data Pre-specified follow up timeRelevant outcomes measured
child mortality)
not reported)
[Ref #] CountryPopulationInterventionComparatorNumber with
follow
syrup (vit A, B1,
B2, B6, D, and
zinc per day for 14 days Multivitamin
Ca) only for
14 days
24 months with acute diarrhea Multivitamin syrup (vit A, B1, B2, B6,
D, and Ca) with 20 mg elemental
with diarrhea of any duration ORS with 20 mg zinc per day,
Table 1Characteristics of included studies(Continued)
[27] BangladeshCommunity-based children 3–59 mo
[25] BangladeshMalnourished (< 76% of NCHS
median), inpatient children 3–
Baqui 2002
Roy 1999
Reference
High
ΩΦϑLow
ΩϑLow
ΩModerate
ϑModerate
placebo 10428 weeksWeight at week 4 and 8, length at week
≥episode of any diarrhea,2 episode of
≥4 and 8, proportion of infants with1
dysentery (any day with blood in the
stool); incidence and prevalence of
diarrhea; mortality (powered for
≥any diarrhea, or1 episode of
anthropometry and morbidity
outcomes)
for 14 days ORS with
ORS with 10 mg zinc sulfate, daily
health workers and community based
and India Infants 1–5 mo with acute diarrhea,
identified through home visits by
study clinics
2007 [53] Ethiopia,
Pakistan,
Walker
14712 weeksMortality, gain in length and weight at
diarrhea episodes (power/sample size
(power/sample size calculations not
xi6 monthsDiarrhea incidence and duration of30
12 weeks, incidence of subsequent
episodes during 6 mo follow up
calculations not reported)
reported)
only, 14 days
(unspecified)
with 20 mg elemental zinc, 14 days Multivitamin
syrup
recovery from persistent diarrhea Multivitamin syrup (Unspecified)
[28] BangladeshConvalescent children 3–24 mo, after
Roy 2007
syrup (Vit A, D, B
complex, Ca)
elemental Zn/5 mL), for 14 days Multivitamin
only
Multivitamin syrup (A, D, B complex,
Ca) with zinc acete (10 mg
[29] BangladeshModerately malnourished (weight/age
61–75% of NCHS median), inpatient
diarrhea, and lab-confirmedShigella
bloody-mucoid diarrhea or febrile
children age 12–59 m with acute
spp
Roy 2008
Placebo603 monthsWeight gain at 3 months, number and
sample size calculations not reported)
episodes during follow up (power/
duration of subsequent diarrhea
sulphate monohydrate) for patients
> 1 y/o, 10 mg of elemental zinc,
or watery stools in a 24 h period) 20 mg of elemental zinc (zinc
14 days, for patients < 1 y/o
acute diarrhea (3 or more loose, liquid
2008 [48] NigeriaOutpatient children 6–24 mo with
Fajolu
follow up (powered for the incidence of
(10 mg/d) only 3339 monthsIncidence rate of diarrhea illness during
acute upper respiratory tract infections)
supplementation (10 mg/d) 10 days of zinc
confirmed ETEC 10 days of zinc (10 mg/d) +
additional 3 months of zinc
2010 [30] BangladeshCommunity-based children 6–23 mo
with acute diarrhea and culture-
Larson
High
of diarrhea during follow up; proportion
162290 daysNumber of diarrheal episodes and days
(powered for the outcome of diarrhea
with at least 1 subsequent episode of
persistent diarrhea during follow up;
diarrhea episode during follow up
day of onset of first subsequent
diarrhea, prolonged diarrhea, or
incidence)
zinc, 5 days Standard course
elemental zinc,
zinc - 20 mg
10 days
liquid stools in the previous 24 h) Short course zinc - 20 mg elemental
[31] BangladeshCommunity-based children 4–59 mo
with diarrhea (3 or more loose or
Alam 2011
viiStudy included children with multiple admission (not just diarrhea) therefore only included data for children who had diarrhea at time of treatment.Power was determined for all children (not stratified by diagnosis)
xDiarrhea morbidity data were collected fromsamples of time periodsthroughout the 2 year follow up period. Mortality rates were calculated using 11,881 child-years of person-time, and incidence rates were calcu-“”
viStudy included children with multiple admission (not just diarrhea) therefore only included data for children who had diarrhea at time of treatment.Power was determined for all children (not stratified by diagnosis)
and power Modified
ΩϑLow
GRADE
score
High
iiDuration of diets was variable. Diets were started at low concentrations and were advanced every 48 hours if no sign of intolerance. If there were signsof intolerance, diets were maintained or decreased as
sample size calculations not reported)
number and duration of subsequent
dysentery episode during follow up;
Zinc (20 mg/day) for 14 daysPlacebo1343 monthsRisk of having at least 1 episode of
diarrhea episodes; change in WAZ,
0.2 mg/kg/day), 14 days Placebo72412 weeksProportion with at least 1 diarrhea
diarrhea during follow up (power/
ixInvestigators included 2 strata of study subjects: Astandard dose stratumwith the dosages given, and aHigh dose stratumwith 40 mg zinc acetate daily, 15 days (Vit A dosage was unchanged)“”“”
episode, 2 diarrhea episodes, or 1
measurements every 2 weeks for
WHZ, and HAZ from enrollment
up data Pre-specified follow up timeRelevant outcomes measured
12 weeks (power/sample size
calculations not reported)
[Ref #] CountryPopulationInterventionComparatorNumber with
viiiStudies in this intervention category are randomized controlled trials with a factorial design, evaluating both Vitamin A and Zinc
follow
ivDefined as age- and sex-specific weight standard deviation scores, from the National Center for Health Statistics median value
iiiDefined as when diarrhea had ceased and patient had consistent weight gain for at least 48 hours
copper (Zn 2 mg/kg/day + Cu
the previous 24 h per mothers report) Zinc (2 mg/kg/day) or zinc +
necessary. When full concentrations were reached, the diet was given for an additional 7 days.
iOutcome listed are only the outcomes of interest for the present systematic review
xiThirty completed 6 month follow up; 50 completed 7-day clinical study
Table 1Characteristics of included studies(Continued)
acute diarrhea (> 3 unformed stools in
pediatric emergency units with acute
watery diarrhea (3 or more episodes
of loose stools over 24 h of < 72 h
[32] IndiaOutpatient children 659 mo with
vAll diets were equivalent in calorie and protein composition
dehydration, and having had no
[33] IndiaChildren 512 yrs. presenting to
duration), with some or severe
ΩSparse data (sample size is <200 participants total)
ΦBlinding and allocation process (not double-blind)
ϑFollow up and withdrawals (>5% of sample size)
lated using 41,788 child-weeks of person-time
treatment
ΨLack of placebo
Patel 2013
Negi 2015
Reference
Mortality
Seven studies (15.2%) presented data on post-acute mortality, with follow-up ranging from 8-days to 2 years. Four were trials of therapeutic zinc interventions, [24, 27, 28, 53], 2 antimicrobial treatments [8, 42], and 1 of a high protein diet [44]. Two of the zinc trials were large studies (8070 and 1042 subjects, respectively) [27, 53] but the
- remaining 5 included less than 150 participants (Fig. 2, Table 2). None of the 7 trials were adequately powered for a mortality endpoint. Only 1 trial, a cluster randomized trial of zinc, found a lower non-injury mortality rate in children living in communities randomized to ORS and zinc compared to those using ORS alone (relative risk [RR] = 0.49 [95% confidence interval {95% CI}: 0.25, 0.94]) [27]. The
- remaining 6 studies reported non-significant risk differences ranging in magnitude from 70 more to 105 less deaths per 1000 children [8, 44] and relative risks ranging from 0.18 to 1.34 [24, 44].
Growth
Studies reported impact on growth in several different ways:
Height/Length, HAZ//LAZ
Ten studies presented data related to length or height, with follow-up time ranging from 21 days to 9 months and none reported sample size calculations/being powered for these outcomes (Table 1). Five trials evaluated a high protein diet, 4 therapeutic zinc and 1 probiotic. Of 4 studies that reported difference in change in (Δ) HAZ/LAZ between intervention groups, 1 high protein diet trial reported a 0.9 z-score greater gain in HAZ/LAZ in the intervention group after 3 weeks of follow-up (95% CI: 0.05, 0.13), [11] but 2 high protein diet trials (with 3 and 29 weeks of follow-up) and a large zinc with 12 weeks of follow-up trial
found no significant benefit (Fig. 3a) [10, 13, 32]. Four studies presented data on Δ absolute height at follow-up, 2 of which were trials of high protein diets with follow-up times of 3 and 29 weeks. Of the 2 high protein diet trials, the trial with 29 weeks of follow-up found a benefit in height change (Fig. 3b) – a 1.10 cm greater change in height compared to the control groups (95% CI: 0.56, 1.64) [10, 13]. Of the other 2 studies evaluating height attainment, a trial of a high protein diet with micronutrients with 36 weeks of follow-up, and another of therapeutic zinc with 8 weeks of follow-up, only the former showed benefit (a greater gain in height of 0.65 cm in the intervention group [95% CI: 0.11, 1.19]) [43, 53]. Percent Δlength was evaluated in 2 therapeutic zinc studies, both of which found a significantly greater length gain among children treated with zinc, but this result was only among underweight children in 1 of the trials [25, 28]. Among 2 studies evaluating prevalence of stunting during follow-up, 1 found that the group treated with probiotics (L. rhamnosus GG) had higher stunting prevalence at 4 weeks of follow-up [54] and a high protein diet trial reported no significant difference at 26 weeks [44].
MUAC
Four studies reported MUAC data during follow-up periods ranging from 15 to 28 days, 2 were high protein studies, 1 was a trial of therapeutic zinc, and 2 trials of RUTF/micronutrient (which assessed MUAC as 1 of the indicators of acute malnutrition). One of the high protein diet studies reported that children in the intervention group gained 0.44 cm more in MUAC on average compared to children given a standard protein diet (95% CI: 0.08, 0.80) [10]. However, neither the remaining high protein diet study nor the zinc trial reported a significant difference in MUAC during follow-up [9, 50]. None of the studies provided sample size estimates making it
Fig. 2 Effect of diarrhea management interventions on mortality (relative risk, risk difference, and associated 95% confidence interval)
(95% CI) −−0.11 (0.24, 0.03)
1980 [8] Low dose ampicillin (50 mg/kg/day)Standard dose ampicillin (150 mg/kg/day)MortalityRisk Difference
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
Antimicrobial Interventions
Gilman
(95% CI) −−0.07 (0.21, 0.06)
(95% CI) Undefined
for 3 days PlaceboMortalityRisk Difference
Relative Risk
2002 [42] 5 mL of 20 g/L nitazoxanide, twice daily
Amadi
(95% CI) 0.58 (0.21, 1.63)
Relative Risk
[26] −ORS with dietary fiber (Benefiber®)WHO- ORS onlyDifference in weight gain at day 7, g (95% CI)52 (18.73, 122.73)
Dietary Supplements
Alam 2000
banana or pectin supplement), 7 days Rice-based diet onlyProportions recovered from diarrhea (formed stool) at each day to day 10Higher in banana and pectin groups
iithan in control group
−Difference in weight gain at day 90, g (95% CI)107 (57.30, 271.30)
−Difference in weight gain at day 60, g (95% CI)45 (80.80, 170.80)
7 days iiiPlaceboDifference in weight gain at day 30, g (95% CI)130 (12.67, 247.33)
[51] Glutamine supplement, 0.3 g/kg/day, for
2001 [15] Rice-based diet with dietary fiber (green
Yalcin 2004
Rabbani
[9] −High protein diet, length unspecifiedStandard hospital dietDifference in weight at day 15, kg (95% CI)0.30 (0.18, 0.78)
−Difference in MUAC at day 15, cm (95% CI)0.00 (0.37, 0.37)
High Protein Diets
Datta 1990
−Difference in change in height at day 21, from admission, cm (95% CI)0.09 (0.57, 0.75)
protein), 21 days Difference in change in weight at day 21 from admission, kg (95% CI)0.47 (0.12, 0.82)
from protein), 21 days Standard diet (7.5% of total energy from
[10] High protein diet (15% of total energy
Kabir 1992
Difference in change in WAZ at day 21 from admission (95% CI)0.30 (0.03, 0.57)
Difference in change in WHZ at day 21 from admission (95% CI)0.40 (0.05, 0.75)
from admission, cm (95% CI) −0.32 (0.29, 0.93)
Difference in change in MUAC at day 21 from admission, cm (95% CI)0.44 (0.08, 0.80)
Difference in change in triceps skinfold thickness at day 21
[11] High protein diet, 21 daysStandard protein diet, 21 daysDifference in change in WAZ at day 21, from admission (95% CI)0.23 (0.07, 0.39)
Difference in change in WHZ at day 21, from admission (95% CI)0.25 (0.05, 0.45)
Kabir 1993
Difference in change in HAZ at day 21, from admission (95% CI)0.90 (0.05, 0.13)
diet, 4960 kJ/l (10 days) Standard diet, 2480 kJ/l (10 days)Difference in percent change in WAZ at day 10 and 40, fromadmission (95% CI)Day 10: 3.50 (1.86, 5.14)
Day 40: 3.11 (0.92, 5.30)
1997 [12] High calorie & high protein milk-cereal
Mazumder
Difference in percent change in WHZ at day 10 and 40, from admission (95% CI)Day 10: 3.76 (1.92, 3.60)
Day 40: 3.34 (0.76, 5.90)
(1178.40, 770.40)
to control −445 (1522.70,
control −92 (1189.60,
1005.60)
632.70)
control 204
Difference in weight at discharge from enrollment, g (95% CI)Comparing soy
diet”(Vivonex) vDifference in weight at end of protocol, g(95% CI)Comparing soy
chicken group
Comparing
group to
group to
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
ivprotein soy-based diet (Nursoy formula) Calorically equivalent standard“elemental
1997 [36] High protein chicken-based diet or high
Nurko
to control 428 (1539.80,
control 1.13 (0.79, 1.61)
683.80)
vi(RR [95%])Comparing soyProportion with nutritional recovery
chicken group
Comparing
group to
to control 1.20 (0.86, 1.7)
−Difference in change in WHZ at 6 mo, from post-intervention WHZ (95% CI)0.09 (0.35, 0.17)
energy from protein), 21 days −Difference in change in weight at 6 mo, from post-intervention weight, kg (95% CI)0.10 (0.24, 0.44)
−Difference in change in WAZ at 6 mo, from post-intervention WAZ (95% CI)0.07 (0.17, 0.31)
Difference in change in height at 6 mo, from post-intervention height, cm (95% CI)1.10 (0.56, 1.64)
chicken group
Comparing
from protein), 21 days Standard protein diet (7.5% of total
[13] High protein diet (15% of total energy
Kabir 1998
Difference in change in HAZ at 6 mo, from post-intervention HAZ (95% CI)0.28 (0.12, 0.44)
breastfeeding and of a nutritious diet vii(95% CI)Day 9061.50 (49.20, 73.80)Difference in weight gain at end of intervention and day 90, g/wk.
mm/y (95% CI) −Day 902.70 (4.60, 10.00)
intervention 12.50 (7.70, 17.30)
intervention 7.50 (4.80, 10.20)
10 days Difference in percent change in WAZ at day 10, from admission WAZ (95% CI)3.50 (2.08, 4.91)
2viii(95% CI)0.65 (0.11, 1.19)Difference in change in height between groups at day 90, (cm/y)
End of
End of
Difference in change in knee heel length at end of intervention and day 90,
(4960 kJ/l), 10 days Control milk-cereal formula (2480 kJ/l),
Counseling on the importance of
breastfeeding and of a nutritious diet, and
2000 [14] High calorie & protein milk-cereal formula
multivitamin tablet (including zinc), until
the end of a 7 day period without
2001 [43] Counseling on the importance of
a high protein millet gruel with a
diarrhea
Valentiner-
Mazumder
Branth
−Risk difference7.4% (4.7%,20.5%)
porridge + milk formula Mortality at 26 weeksRelative risk1.34 (95% CI: 0.79,
ixat 26 weeksGreater gain in interventionMedian change in weight- SDs
2.27)
group (< 0.001)p
4.05.5 g protein/kg/day Standard nutritional support: maize
protein to provide 150 kcal/kg/day and
2007 [44] Standard nutritional support + extra
Rollins
Median change in WAZ at 26 weeksGreater gain in intervention
group (< 0.05)p
−Proportion underweight (WAZ <2 SDs) at 26 weeks (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])0.48 (0.30, 0.77)
Proportion stunted (LAZ <2 SDs) at 26 weeks (Prevalence Ratio[95% CI])0.87 (0.67, 1.13)
by khitchri and yogurt for 7 days −−−Khitchri and yogurt for 14 daysDifference in weight gain at day 7 and 14, g/wk. (95% CI)Day 7:400 (559.40,240.60)
Day 14: 385.7 (209.60, 561.80)
−−−Difference in weight gain at recovery, g/kg admission weight/24 h (95% CI)3.80 (7.15,0.44)
1994 [38] −−Corn-based (lactose-free) formula, 21 daysMilk-based formula, 21 daysDifference in weight increment at 6 weeks, kg (95% CI)0.02 (0.30, 0.26)
until recovery or 7 days min −−Difference in weight gain at day 7, g/kg admission weight/24 h (95% CI)3.20 (6.86, 0.46)
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
(lactose-free), until recovery or 7 days min Calorically equivalent milk-based formula,
1991 [50] Soy milk (lactose-free) for 7 days, followed
[16] Legume and cereal-based formula
Lactose Free Diets
Bhan 1988
Lozano
Bhutta
xiiiChange in WHZ at dischargeSimilar improvement in all groups
xProbability of continuing diarrhea at each day to day 12No significant difference (p = 0.76)
xixiiYogurt-based dietuntil dischargeDifference in weight gain at discharge among groups at dischargeNo difference among groups
rehydration (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI]) 0.97 (0.06, 15.19)
until discharge Proportion of patients whose weight on day 7 was lower than at
protein (lactose-free), until discharge Rice-based formula with milk protein,
2009 [37] Amino-acid based diet, isolated soy-based,
or hyrolyzed casein-based diet; until
1996 [17] Rice-based formula with egg white
discharge
Bhatnagar
de Mattos
xivStandard hospital dietWeight at day 21 compared to weight at beginning of therapyBetter in intervention group
group 0.68 (0.37, 1.22)
micronutrient
meal/day for 14 d Relative Risk of first event of malnutrition (95% CI)RUTF vs
An instruction to feed the child an extra
group 0.62 (0.35, 1.10)
RUTF vs control
Other Dietary Interventions
and high hydrolyzed lactalbumin, at least
1984 [35] Semi-elemental diet with low osmolarity
21 days
Eichenberger
micronutrient powder plus instructions to
feed the child an extra meal/day for 14 d
RUTF, plus instructions to feed the child
an extra meal/day for 14 d; or
Kam 2016
(Uganda)
van der
[45]
control 0.92 (0.54, 1.54)
Micronutrient
group vs
group 1.12 (0.84, 1.50)
micronutrient
meal/day for 14 d Relative Risk of first event of malnutrition (95% CI)RUTF vs
An instruction to feed the child an extra
xv)0.81 (0.61,1.09
group 0.91 (0.69, 1.20)
RUTF vs control
Micronutrient
group vs
control
micronutrient powder plus instructions to
feed the child an extra meal/day for 14 d
RUTF, plus instructions to feed the child
an extra meal/day for 14 d; or
Kam 2016
(Nigeria)
van der
[46]
control −−0.50 (1.86, 0.76)
−−0.3 (1.45, 0.85)
standard WHO-ORS, with regular diet Standard diet for diarrhea managementDifference in weight at day 14, kg (95% CI)Comparing high
standard ORS to
Comparing
potassium/
chloride to
control
1983 [39] High potassium/ high chloride ORS, or
ORS Formulations
Santosham
potassium/ 2.00 (1.57, 2.42)
Difference in percent weight gain at day 14 (95% CI)Comparing high
chloride to
control
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
control 2.30 (1.82, 2.77)
1991 [40] −Alanine-based ORSStandard WHO-ORSDifference in weight gain at day 7, g (95% CI)18 (94.37, 130.38)
standard ORS to
Comparing
Ribeiro
−−0.06 (1.19,
−−0.08 (1.20,
xviDifference in weight gain at day 16, gSimilar between groups
1.07)
1.04)
glucose and rice
electrolyte content Proportion with diarrhea at day 14 (RR [95% CI])0.80 (0.21, 2.95)
resistant starch
and rice ORS
glucose with
with amylase-resistant starch (ARS) Rice-based ORSDifference in time to attain 80% of median WLZ, days (95% CI)Difference
Difference
between
between
amylase
ORS
1997 [21] Glucose-based ORSRice powder-based ORS, equivalent in
[55] Glucose-based ORS, or glucose-based ORS
Alam 2009
Faruque
1.00 (0.15, 6.86)
rice ORS group
Proportion with diarrhea at or after day 7 (RR [95% CI])Risk in glucose
(RR, [95% CI])
compared to
ORS group
0.49 (0.05, 5.27)
rice ORS groups
with ARS group
Risk in glucose
(RR, [95% CI])
compared to
sbulgaricuS. andthermophilus −Milk-based formula onlyDifference in weight gain at day 7, g (95% CI)43 (109.18, 195.18)
−Difference in weight gain at day 7, g/kg (95% CI)4.4 (5.50, 14.30)
2001 [47] Milk-based formula fermented withL.
Boudraa
Probiotics
[19] 9CFUPlaceboDifference in change in WHZ at 6 weeksNo difference betweenGG 10L. rhamnosus
groups (= 0.06)p
2014 [20] 10CFUPlaceboProportion with diarrhea at 4 weeks follow up (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])0.65 (0.40, 1.07)GG 10L. rhamnosus
Proportion with severe diarrhea during follow-up (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])1.15 (0.65, 2.05)
2007 [41] capsulesPlaceboProportion with diarrhea on day 7 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])0.39 (0.20, 0.74)S. boulardii
Proportion with diarrhea after day 7 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])0.25 (0.07, 0.82)
Misra 2009
Villarruel
Sindhu
−Proportion underweight (WAZ <2 SD) at week 4 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])1.66 (0.83, 3.30)
−Proportion stunted (HAZ <2 SD) at week 4 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])1.77 (1.00, 3.13)
−Proportion wasted (WHZ <2 SD) at week 4 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])0.53 (0.16, 1.71)
(Prevalence Ratio [95% CI]) 1.03 (0.54, 1.98)
2014 [52] 8xviiCFUORS onlyProportion with diarrhea at day 12 (Prevalence Difference [95% CI])0.17 (0.08, 0.26)ORS with17,938 10L. reuteri
Proportion with diarrhea requiring hospitalization during follow-up
Dinleyici
0.64 (0.43, 0.96)
supplemented
supplemented
vs. non-
xviiixixor bothdaily for 15 days), PlaceboProportion with diarrhea on day 7 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])Zinc-
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
daily for 15 days), zinc acetate (14.2 mg
1999 [34] μVitamin A (4500g retinol equivalent
Therapeutic Micronutrients (Vitamin A and Zinc)
Faruque
0.78 (0.52, 1.49)
supplemented
supplemented
Vitamin A–
vs. non-
0.67 (0.24, 1.85)
supplemented
supplemented
vs. non-
Proportion with diarrhea on day 16 (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])Zinc-
control 0.11 kg (= 0.045)p
0.67 (0.24, 1.85)
group vs. non-
supplemented
supplemented
xxiZinc group vsMultivitamin syrup onlyDifference in change in weight at day 7 compared to day 1, g
Vitamin A–
vs control 0.07 kg (= 0.21)p
Vitamin A group
2001 [22] Multivitamin syrup with 20 mg elemental
xxormultivitamin syrup with Vitamin A
zinc (twice daily for 7 days), or
both
Khatun
vs. control 0.06 kg (= 0.074)p
Zinc+Vitamin A
control 0.23 (0.08, 0.71)
Proportion with diarrhea at day 7, (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])Zinc group vs.
vs. control 0.92 (0.54, 1.59)
Vitamin A group
vs. control 0.62 (0.31, 1.21)
Zinc+Vitamin A
Therapeutic Micronutrients (Zinc alone)
xxiizinc Multivitamin syrup onlyProportion of episodes lasting longer than 7 days (Prevalence Ratio [95% CI])0.87 (0.65, 1.16)
(Prevalence Ratio [95% CI]) 0.78 (0.57, 1.07)
Proportion of diarrhea episodes taken to a physician during follow up
1995 [23] Multivitamin syrup with 20 mg elemental
Sazawal
(95% CI) −−0.05 (0.11, 0.01)
weight decreased in control group
group was maintained while body
xxiiiMean body weight in interventionChange in weight at discharge, g
(95% CI) 0.18 (0.02, 1.49)
per kg of body weight, 28 days xxv−−−(95% CI)Day 7:0.57 (1.14,0.002)Multivitamin onlyDifference in weight at day 7 and 14, kg
−−Day 14:0.46 (1.06, 0.14)
−Difference in overall weight increment at day 14, g/kg/day1.60 (1.48, 4.68)
xxiv0.99 (0.53, 1.88)Proportion with diarrhea after day 15 (RR [95% CI])
Risk Difference
zinc, 14 days Multivitamin syrup onlyMortalityRelative Risk
1999 [49] Multivitamin with 3 mg of elemental zinc
[24] Multivitamin syrup with 20 mg elemental
Roy 1998
Bhutta
- −−Week 2:4 (202.60, 194.60)
- −−Week 3:45 (303.70, 213.70)
- −−Week 4:60 (347.70, 227.70)
- −−Week 5:79 (361.40, 203.40)
- −−Week 6:57 (354.38, 240.40)
- −−Week 7:53 (352.70, 246.70)
- −−Week 8:19.00 (394.15, 356.15)
zinc, 14 days −Multivitamin onlyDifference in weight gain at each week of 8 week follow up, g (95% CI)Week 1: 30 (204.70, 264.73)
−−Day 14:0.40 (1.08, 0.28)
−−Difference in MUAC at day 7 and 14, cm (95% CI)Day 7:0.30 (0.98, 0.38)
−Difference in overall MUAC increment, cm (95% CI)0.00 (0.13, 0.13)
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
[25] Multivitamin with 20 mg of elemental
Roy 1999
Difference in gain in length at week 8, mm4.40 mm, 30% greater gain (<p
xxvi0.03)
xxviixxviiiRD (95% CI)2.9 (0.80, 5.10)
[27] ORS with 20 mg zinc per day, 14 daysORS onlyIncidence of diarrhea during 2 year follow upRR (95% CI)0.85 (0.76, 0.96)
Baqui 2002
xxixRD (95% CI)2.2 (0.60, 3.70)
Mortality during 2 year follow upRR (95% CI)0.49 (0.25, 0.94)
−−Difference in length at week 4 and 8, cm (95% CI)Week 4:0.09 (0.61, 0.43)
−−Week 8:0.12 (0.63, 0.39)
−Week 8: 0.06 (0.08, 0.20)
2007 [53] −ORS with 10 mg zinc, 14 daysORS with placeboDifference in weight at week 4 and 8, kg (95% CI)Week 4: 0.06 (0.08, 0.20)
- xxx≥1.01 (0.92, 1.12)Proportion of infants with1 episode of any diarrhea (RR [95% CI])
- xxxi≥Proportion of infants with2 episode of any diarrhea (RR [95% CI])0.79 (0.67, 0.95)
stool) (RR [95% CI]) 2.10 (0.96, 4.61)
≥Proportion of infants with1 episode of dysentery (any day with blood in the
Walker
SD) 0.62 ± 0.68
group (mean ±
Incidence of diarrhea (episodes/month)Intervention
(mean ± SD) 0.61 ± 0.70
Control group
SD) 2.68 ± 4.11
group (mean ±
Prevalence of diarrhea (days/mo)Intervention
(mean ± SD) 2.20 ± 3.19
Control group
MortalityRR (95% CI)0.99 (0.01, 77.9)
xxxii−−0.18 (66.42,RD (95% CI)
66.06)
xxxivPercent gain in length at 12 weeks, mmComparable between groups when
all patient were compared (= 0.6)p
14 days Difference in mean number of diarrhea episodes during 6 mo follow up (95%
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
xxxiiiCI)
[28] Multivitamin with 10 mg zinc per 5 ml,
Roy 2007
≤(WAZ70% NCHS median) (p < 0.03)
24% greater among underweight
−−RD (95% CI)0.01 (0.10, 0.07)
MortalityRR (95% CI)0.84 (0.29,2.37)
[29] Multivitamin with 20 mg zinc, 14 daysMultivitamin onlyGeometric mean diarrhea incidenceStatistically significantly higher in
control group (= 0.03)p
Roy 2008
for patients < 1 y PlaceboNumber of subsequent diarrhea episodes during 2 month follow upDifference not significant (= 0.53)p
Weight gain at 2 months, gHigher in intervention group (<p
−−Diarrhea episodes during follow up, months 4–6 (Risk Difference, [95% CI])0.37 (0.35, 1.07)
−−Diarrhea episodes during follow up, months 7–9 (Risk Difference, [95% CI])0.18 (0.41, 0.75)
follow up (95% CI) −0.06 (0.07, 0.19)
xxxv−months 1–3 Risk Difference, [95% CI])1.02 (0.26, 1.79)Diarrhea episodes during follow up,
−Diarrhea episodes during entire 9 month follow up (Risk Difference, [95% CI])0.54 (0.07, 1.01)
−Difference in mean number of days of diarrhea during 3 month follow up (95% CI)0.2 (0.35, 0.75)
0.001)
10 days Difference in mean number of diarrhea episodes during 3 month
followed by 3 mo supplementary zinc
[31] Short course zinc–20 mg zinc, 5 daysStandard course zinc–20 mg zinc,
by 3 mo supplementary zinc (10 mg) 10 days therapeutic zinc (20 mg)
placebo
2010 [30] 10 days therapeutic zinc (20 mg) followed
2008 [48] 20 mg zinc for patients > 1 y; 10 mg zinc
Alam 2011
Larson
Fajolu
xxxviiDay of onset of first subsequent diarrhea episode during follow upNo difference between groups
xxxviCI]) 0.63 (0.50, 0.79)
CI]) 0.63 (0.48, 0.81)
up (RR [95% CI]) 1.03 (0.95, 1.14)
≥Proportion of children with persistent diarrhea (14 days) (Prevalence Ratio [95%
≥Proportion of children with prolonged diarrhea (7 days) (Prevalence Ratio [95%
Proportion of children with at least 1 episode of diarrhea during 3 month follow
placebo 1.01 (0.76, 1.33)
placebo 0.96 (0.72, 1.27)
placebo 2.25 (1.10, 4.63)
Zinc + Copper
Ratio [95% CI]) Zinc group vs
(Prevalence Ratio [95% CI]) Zinc group vs
group vs
14 days PlaceboProportion with at least 1 diarrhea episode during 3 month follow up (Prevalence
xxxviiiProportion with at least 2 episodes of diarrhea during 3 month follow up
[32] Zinc (2 mg/kg/day) or zinc + copper (Zn
2 mg/kg/day + Cu 0.2 mg/kg/day),
Patel 2013
group 1.12 (0.64, 1.97)
Zinc + Copper
Zinc group vs
placebo 1.31 (0.30, 5.77)
follow up (Prevalence Ratio[95% CI]) Zinc group vs
Proportion with at least 1 dysentery episode during 3 month
group 1.37 (0.31, 6.04)
Zinc + Copper
Zinc group vs
placebo −−0.01 (0.18, 0.16)
placebo −−0.1 (0.12, 0.10)
placebo −0.08 (0.05, 0.21)
placebo −0.05 (0.07, 0.17)
placebo −0.06 (0.04, 0.16)
placebo −0.09 (0.07, 0.25)
placebo −0.03 (0.08, 0.14)
placebo −0.02 (0.09, 0.13)
Zinc + copper
Zinc + copper
Zinc + copper
Zinc + copper
Difference in change in WAZ at month 3 (95% CI)Zinc group vs
Difference in change in WHZ at month 3 (95% CI)Zinc group vs
Difference in change in HAZ at month 3 (95% CI)Zinc group vs
3 month follow up (95% CI) Zinc group vs
group vs
group vs
group vs
group vs
Difference in mean number of subsequent diarrhea episodes per child during
≥Table 2Intervention effects on post-acute (7 days after enrollment) mortality, length, weight, and/or diarrhea presence(Continued)
ReferenceInterventionComparatorRelevant Outcomes and Results
subjects 0.65 (0.37, 1.23)
[95%]) Among all
[33] Zinc (20 mg/day) for 14 daysPlaceboRisk of having at least 1 episode of diarrhea during 3 mo follow up (Relative risk
Negi 2015
xxiNo SDs or CIs given for differences. P-value for the difference between zinc group and control is 0.045; for the difference between vitamin A group and control is 0.207; and for the difference between zinc + vitamin
subjects (= 60)n 0.65 (0.31, 1.38)
xixResults from comparison of zinc+vitamin A vs. placebo not reported (reported on zinc effect by combing the zinc alone and zinc+vitamin A group and reported on vitamin A effect by combining vitamin A alone
xviiiThe authors changed the dose after 417 children were enrolled (dosages listed, analyzed as "standard strata" of subjects), and the remaining 273 children received a higher dose of zinc (analyzed as "high dose
ivDuration of diets was variable. Diets were started at low concentrations and were advanced every 48 hours if no sign of intolerance. If there were signsof intolerance, diets were maintained or decreased as
Among zinc-
deficient
xvConfidence interval states in manuscript is (0.605, 0.090) which does not contain the relative risk estimate of 0.812 therefore have assumed the 0.090 was a typo and replaced with 1.090.
viiiUnits were assumed to be cm/y due to description of results in the manuscript (rather than (cm/y)2 as presented in the studys Four)’
ixDefined as age- and sex-specific weight standard deviation scores, from the National Center for Health Statistics median value
iEstimate may be interpreted as 11 fewer deaths per 100 children in the intervention group compared to the control group
viiAll outcome measurements were compared against measurements at entry, when the child had had diarrhea for 14 days
strata"): Vitamin A (4500 ug retinol equivalent daily for 15 days) and/or zinc acetate (40 mg daily for 15 days)
viDefined as when diarrhea had ceased and patient had consistent weight gain for at least 48 hours
iiQuantitative estimates not presented and reported p-values not specific to time-points of interest
necessary. When full concentrations were reached, the diet was given for an additional 7 days.
vAppropriate data for calculation of weight gain or difference in weight gain not presented
xxVitamin A dosage was 100000 IU for children < 1 yo, and 200000 for children > 1 yo
xiAll diets were equivalent in caloric and protein content
iiiData presented were assumed to be mean ± SD
xivNo estimates or statistical significance is given
xviNo estimates or statistical significance given
xiiiNo estimate or statistical significance given
xiiNo estimate or statistical significance given
xviiRR was undefined due to a0cell“”
xxiiDuration of intervention is unclear
xNo quantitative estimates given
with the zinc+vitamin A group).
A group is 0.074.
xxxviThe authors reported "The proportion of prolonged (>=7 d) and persistent diarrhea episodes (>=14 d) did not vary between the 5-d (19 vs. 16%; P 0.08) and10-d (12 vs. 10%; P = 0.14) groups" which suggests the
p-values correspond to the comparison of persistent and prolonged among children treated with 5-days and among children treated with 10-days. We have instead assumed the appropriate comparisons are propor-
xxxAll data presented are unadjusted. The authorsresults are discrepant from this tables results, as authors adjust for original diarrhea episode lasting > 7 days, exclusive breastfeeding upon enrollment, and WLZ at’’
xxviiDifference in mean diarrhea incidence rates. Estimate may be interpreted as 2.9 more episodes per 100 child-years of observation were experienced inthe control group compared to the intervention group
xxixDifference in mean mortality rates. Estimate may be interpreted as 2.2 more deaths per 1000 child years of observation experienced by the control group compared to the intervention group
tion of prolonged (19% vs. 12%, p-value=0.0001) and persistent (16% vs. 10%, p-value=0.0004) which would result in statistically significant differences (unlike what was reported).
xxxiCalculated values of lower and upper limits of 95% CI use data presented on unadjusted proportions and differed from what was represented in original publication
xxvFor this and all outcomes, data were not labeled. Data presented were assumed to be mean and SD based on labeled data on another figure in the paper
xxivAssessed by proportion of patients with delayed recovery, with recovery defined as the passage of formed stool followed by 2 days without diarrhea
xxxiiEstimate may be interpreted as 0.18 deaths fewer in intervention group per 100,000 child-weeks of observation compared to control group
xxxvRisk differences may be interpreted as excess number of acute diarrhea episodes per child-year attributed to lack of zinc supplementation
xxxviiiEstimates calculated for relative risk of at least 1, 2, or dysenteric diarrhea episodes are discrepant from published results
xxviiiCalculated values of lower and upper limits of 95% CI differed from what was represented in original publication
xxiiiData were presented but were not interpretable due to an ambiguous or incorrect title
xxxiiiData presented was assumed to be mean ± SD
xxxviiNo estimates or statistical significance given
xxxivQuantitative estimates not presented
xxviNo SDs or CIs given. P< 0.05.
beginning of follow up
- a
- b
- Fig. 3 a Effect of diarrhea management interventions on change in HAZ/LAZ (difference in change in HAZ/LAZ and 95% confidence interval). b Effect of diarrhea management interventions on change in height (difference in change in height (cm) and 95% confidence interval)
unclear whether they were adequately powered to detect differences in MUAC. Both trials of RUTF and micronutrient powder reported the incidence of acute malnutrition (WHZ < 2, MUAC < 115 mm, or oedema) to be similar across all combinations of groups (RUTF vs controls; micronutrients vs. controls, and RUTF vs. micronutrients) in the subgroup of children from both trials who had diarrhea at enrollment [45, 46].
WHZ, WAZ, or absolute weight
Thirty-two trials (74.4%) with follow-up periods ranging from 7 days to 29 weeks, reported data on weight, WAZ, or WHZ. Of these, 9 assessed a high protein diet,
- 7 assessed therapeutic zinc (including 1 which also assessed vitamin A), and 5 tested lactose-free diets. Four were trials of ORS formulations, 3 of probiotics, and 1 each of semi-elemental diet, glutamine, and dietary fiber. Of the 4 trials evaluating differences in ΔWAZ between study groups, 3 high protein and 1 therapeutic zinc trials,
- 2 (both high protein) reported a statistically significant improvement (ranging from 0.23 [11] to 0.3 z-scores
- [10]) compared to a standard diet (Fig. 4a) although none were explicitly powered for this outcome. The same 2 diet trials also reported a significant benefit in WHZ, with high protein groups gaining 0.25 [31] to 0.4 units
- [11] more in WHZ than the standard diet group (Fig. 4b) whereas the 2 zinc trials assessing ΔWHZ, 1 of which was explicitly powered to address WHZ, found no
difference [32, 53]. Two additional trials assessed WHZ although did not present quantitative results for calculation of effect size and 95% confidence intervals; A probiotics trial concluded there was no difference in ΔWHZ at 6 weeks between the treated and untreated groups, [19] while a high protein diet trial reported a greater median ΔWAZ in children given high protein diets at 26 weeks of follow-up [44].
Twenty-two studies presented data on absolute weight gain (Fig. 4c) or weight at follow-up: 6 high protein diet trials, 6 zinc (1 of which also assessed vitamin A), 4 lactose free diets, 2 ORS, and 1 each of a probiotic, semielemental diet, dietary fiber, and glutamine. Three of the 6 high protein trials found a statistically significant improvement in weight associated with the intervention group, [10, 43, 44] as did 3 of the 6 zinc trials, [22, 25, 48] 1 of which also assessed vitamin A which did not appear to have a weight benefit [22]. Two of the 4 lactose-free diets [16, 50] and 1 of 2 ORS trials demonstrated a significant benefit in weight [39]. This trial found a greater percent improvement in weight 14 days after presentation in the groups of children treated with ORS (90 mmol/l or 50 mmol/l of sodium) vs. no ORS but did not find a statistically significant difference when measured as absolute difference in weight. Weight gain was significantly improved in the trial of a semi-elemental diet [35] and the single trial of glutamine found intervention children to have 130 g more weight gain than the placebo group at follow-up day 30, but not at days 60 or 90 of follow-up
- a
- b
- c
- d
- Fig. 4 (See legend on next page.)
(See figure on previous page.)
- Fig. 4 a Effect of diarrhea management interventions on change in WAZ (difference in change in WAZ and 95% confidence interval). b Effect of diarrhea management interventions on change in WHZ/WLZ (difference in change in WHZ/WLZ and 95% confidence interval). c Effect of diarrhea management interventions on weight gain (difference in weight gain [g] and 95% confidence interval). d Effect of diarrhea management interventions on weight at follow up (difference in weight [kg] and 95% confidence interval)
- Fig. 5 Effect of diarrhea management interventions on diarrhea morbidity during follow up (relative risk or prevalence ratio of diarrhea at specified time during follow up [95% CI])
report specific prevalences [17]. The 2 trials assessing ORS formulations (providing 3 estimates) did not demonstrate a benefit [34, 55] nor did the 2 vitamin A trials [22, 34].
[51]. The single dietary fiber and probiotic trials evaluating weight gain did not find a significant effect [26, 47].
Of studies reporting on diarrhea frequency indicators other than prevalence of diarrhea at follow-up, findings were heterogeneous. One study found that children given a rice-based diet with green banana or pectin (dietary fiber) were more likely to have recovered from diarrhea by day 5 of follow-up, while most children given the rice-based diet alone continued to have diarrhea until day 10 of follow-up [15]. Another found no children treated with Lactobacillus reuteri 17938 to have diarrhea beyond 7-days whereas 17.4% of children without probiotic treatment did have prolonged diarrhea [52]. A trial of 8070 community-based children found that those given zinc with ORS had 2.9 fewer episodes of diarrhea per 100 child-years (95%CI: 0.8, 5.1) than those given ORS alone [27]. A study contrasting 10 day therapeutic zinc (20 mg/day) with 3 months of supplemental zinc (10 mg/day) to the therapeutic zinc course alone found that the long term zinc reduced diarrhea incidence over a 9 month period by 21% (2.05 vs.2.59 episodes / child years) [30]. Compared to children given the multivitamin alone, children given a multivitamin with zinc had an average of 0.33 fewer subsequent diarrhea episodes (95%
Recurrent or prolonged diarrhea at follow-up
Twenty studies (45.7% of total) reported on diarrhea frequencies during follow-up periods ranging from 7 days to
- 3 months. The majority were trials of therapeutic zinc (13), including 2 that also assessed vitamin A, followed by probiotic trials (3), ORS formulation (3 comparisons in 2 trials) and 1 diet fiber and 1 lactose-free diet. Only 4 of the trials explicitly described being powered to address diarrhea prevalence or incidence during follow-up [22, 27, 31, 53]. Figure 5 shows the 12 trials (providing 15 estimates due to 3 trials including 3 arms) that reported data on prevalence of diarrhea 7 days or more after presentation (8 zinc [2 of which also assessed vitamin A], 2 ORS (1 of which compared 3 formulations), and 2 probiotic). Only 2 zinc studies [22, 31] and 1 probiotic (Saccharomyces boulardii) trial found a reduction in diarrhea prevalence associated with the intervention [41]. The other 6 zinc trials [23, 24, 32–34, 53] and probiotic trial of Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG [54] did not find a significant effect on diarrhea prevalence during follow-up. The lactose-free diet reported no effect on the presence of diarrhea at day 12 (p = 0.76) but did not
CI: -0.39, − 0.27) and diarrhea incidence was similarly reduced in the 6 month follow-up period [28, 29]. Conversely, a placebo-controlled trial of therapeutic zinc among 1042 children reported no difference in the mean number of subsequent diarrhea episodes during a 3 month follow-up period nor did 2 smaller zinc trials [29, 32, 48].
Discussion
While significant progress has been made over the past 25 years in reducing deaths attributed to diarrhea, there is increasing recognition that diarrhea is associated with mortality, subsequent morbidities, and malnutrition in the period after a diarrheal episode [56, 57]. These postacute sequelae highlight the need, and opportunity, to identify interventions to reduce morbidity and mortality among children presenting with diarrhea. This systematic review appraised diarrhea intervention trials for evidence of effects on post-acute sequelae of diarrhea, including mortality, nutritional status, and diarrhea presence during an extended follow-up period.
We found very few trials that evaluated post-acute diarrheal mortality, and only 1 (of zinc) was explicitly powered to address mortality and found mortality benefit [27]. The other zinc trials did not report a mortality benefit. As summarized in a recent Cochrane review, zinc appears to reduce diarrhea duration, particularly in malnourished children, although the degree to which this effect translates to mortality benefit remains unknown [58]. Therapeutic zinc also appears to have limited to no efficacy on morbidity or growth in children under 6 months of age [53, 59].
Post-acute mortality was assessed in 2 trials of antibiotics that found no mortality benefit, yet were underpowered to do so. Both trials included less than 100 children and only 1 was placebo-controlled. The role of antibiotics in diarrhea management remains controversial. In the absence of diagnostics, diarrhea management guidelines recommend antibiotics only for dysentery or suspected cholera [60, 61]. Limiting antibiotics to these 2 indications may miss other serious enteric infections amenable to antibiotics [62, 63]. In practice however, many children without these indications are treated with an antibiotic, the benefits of which are not well understood [64]. Large placebo-controlled clinical trials are needed to determine the potential harm and/or benefit of antibiotics to reduce post-acute diarrhea morbidity and mortality.
Over 30 trials reported on growth outcomes. Dietary supplementation with macro- or micro-nutrients, high protein and lactose-free diets, and probiotics were assessed for effects on growth with mixed results. We found substantial variability in how growth outcomes were evaluated, making comparisons between studies challenging. Two of the 5 trials of dietary interventions found beneficial impacts on WAZ/WHZ with a high protein isocaloric diet. In a single
study, glutamine demonstrated a signal of benefit at 1 time point which was not sustained. Most trials that assessed weight reported no intervention effect; perhaps because weight gain restored through hydration during the acute phase of diarrhea overshadowed weight gain from trialed interventions. High protein diets, either alone or in combination with micronutrients such as zinc, had a modest impact on short to medium term linear growth (3 weeks to 9 months). However, this effect was inconsistently demonstrated. High protein diets may restore the protein loss that can occur during and immediately after infection [65, 66]. Replacing protein may modify growth consequences of diarrhea by increasing protein availability or by influencing hormonal regulation [67–69]. The combination of high protein and zinc may restore integrity of damaged mucosal surfaces and improve nutrient absorption [70–72]. However evidence around the effect of zinc on markers of intestinal permeability, as measured by the lactulose to mannitol ratio, are inconsistent [49, 73, 74]. Specific amino acids may also be important; glutamine has been shown to protect against bacterial translocation through maintenance of the gut barrier in animal models [75–77].
Diarrhea during follow-up was the most commonly reported outcome assessed in this review. Numerous systematic reviews of therapeutic zinc on diarrheal outcomes have been conducted, all of which suggest some benefit [58, 78–80]. The effects of zinc on diarrhea at a specified day of follow-up were recently summarized in a Cochrane review and pooled relative risks of diarrhea at day 3, day 5, and day 7 associated with zinc all showed a statistically significant benefit [58]. Our review included diarrhea assessed at 7 days and beyond (7 days to 4 months) and found inconsistent results, perhaps demonstrating a waning in effect or sub-optimal statistical power at longer follow-up time points. Given therapeutic zinc is recommended for 14 days in current WHO management guidelines yet the data on benefit seems most pronounced within the first 7 days, days 7– 14 of the currently recommended zinc course may need further evaluation.
Three of the 4 probiotic trials evaluating diarrhea outcomes demonstrated a benefit on diarrhea during followup (Saccharomyces boulardii, Lactobacillus reuteri 17938 and 1 of the 2 Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG trials). However the Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG trial that did not find a benefit in diarrhea during follow-up did report improvements in intestinal function (as measured by the lactulose to mannitol test) and higher immunoglobulin G (IgG) in the subgroup of children with rotavirus infection treated with the probiotic [54]. Most clinical trials of probiotics have been conducted in high-resource settings and have treated and followed children for less than 7 days [81, 82]. Although not included in this review because it was published after the search was conducted, a recent pilot
study (n=76) conducted in Botswana found a greater increase in HAZ and reduced diarrhea recurrence over 60days of follow-up among admitted children with diarrhea randomized to Lactobacillus reuteri 17938, [62]. The European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology recently recommended probiotics, specifically Saccharomyces boulardii or Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG, to reduce the duration and intensity of gastroenteritis [83]. The mechanisms by which probiotics may decrease diarrheal symptoms are largely unknown, but may act by out-competing pathogenic enteric infections for nutrients, restoring gut barrier functions, and/or by restoring gut microbial balance.
This review had several limitations. Most trials, particularly trials used to evaluate mortality, were underpowered. A 2-armed clinical trial powered to detect a 50% reduction in a 3-month diarrheal case fatality rate of 2% would require over 4000 participants, a sample size far larger than most trials reporting mortality outcomes in this review and far smaller than sample sizes required to detect smaller intervention effects or lower case fatality rates. Many trials were excluded because of short length of follow-up and included trials had follow-up times ranging from 7-days to 9 months which could explain heterogeneity between studies, particularly studies of growth outcomes. Some interventions were more represented than others based on available clinical trial data. Markers of enteric function were not included in this review as prespecified outcomes, despite a growing body of evidence suggesting that enteric dysfunction is linked to poor outcomes following acute illness [84]. Because of the heterogeneity in interventions, outcome measurements, and follow-up time, we did not calculate pooled measures of effect. For the same reason, we did not report a GRADE score for every individual result but rather for overall study quality, and most trials were graded as low or very low. Standardized measures of the nutritional consequences of diarrhea and diarrhea morbidity will be important to enable future meta-analyses. This review includes data from a wide range of geographic, demographic and epidemiologic settings. However, most included trials were conducted in Asia, with less than 15% of all included trials conducted in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Diarrhea-mortality rates are higher in SSA than in South Asia and recent projections of childhood mortality into 2030 predict that SSA will contribute to 60% of all childhood deaths [5, 57]. Host characteristics, such as nutritional status and HIV-infection/−exposure vary greatly between these regions making generalizability of intervention effect challenging [85–87].
Conclusions
In many resource-limited settings, diarrheal episodes in young children are frequent and are associated with
increased risk of mortality as well as growth failure and risk of subsequent infections. The mechanisms by which diarrhea and underlying enteric infections lead to morbidity, malnutrition, and mortality are multifactorial, likely requiring multiple complementary interventions to reduce likelihood of recurrence or persistence, promote healing of the gut mucosa, and to replenish lost protein and nutrients. Well-designed, multi-factorial, clinical trials evaluating the extended impact of diarrhea management interventions are urgently needed to reduce the long-term risks associated with diarrhea.
Additional file
Additional file 1: Supplement. (DOCX 129 kb)
Abbreviations CI: Confidence Interval; GRADE: Grading of Recommendations Assessment Development and Evaluation; HAZ: Height-for-age z-score; LAZ: Length-forage z-score; LMICs: Low- and middle-income countries; MSD: Moderate-tosevere diarrhea; MUAC: Mid upper arm circumference; PR: Prevalence Ratio; RCT: Randomized controlled trial; RR: Relative Risk; RUTF: Ready-to-use therapeutic foods; WAZ: Weight-for-age z-score; WHZ: Weight-for-height zscore; WLZ: Weight-for-length z-score
Acknowledgements We would like to thank the Global Center for Integrated Health of Women, Adolescents, and Children, the Kenya Research and Training Center, and the Center for AIDS Research Enterics Working group for their support during the preparation of this article.
Funding Funding was provided by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation (OPP1132140) and the UW Global Center for Integrated Health of Women, Adolescents and Children (Global WACh). JLW and DMD are supported by the Childhood Acute Illness and Nutrition Network (CHAIN, OPP1131320). GJS is supported by a National Institute of Health mentoring award (grant number K24- HD054314) and PBP and GJS are supported by the International Core of the University of Washington Center for AIDS Research (CFAR; Seattle, WA, USA), an NIH funded program (P30 AI027757). The funders had no role in the study design, data abstraction, data interpretation, or writing of the manuscript.
Availability of data and materials All data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article.
Authors’ contributions PBP, JLW, DMD, and GJS conceived of the idea and developed the protocol for this review. All titles and abstracts were screened by PBP and HEA, RLB and HEA reviewed all abstracts and full text articles with final input from PBP. RLB and HEA abstracted data from, and conducted GRADE assessments of, included studies. All authors contributed to the development, reading, and approving the final version for publication.
Ethics approval and consent to participate Not applicable
Consent for publication Not applicable
Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Author details Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
- 2Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
- 3Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
- 4Department of Medicine (Infectious Disease), University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA. 5Department of Health Services, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA. Received: 7 August 2017 Accepted: 17 January 2018
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Figures
Figure 1
Summary of intervention types and outcomes evaluated in the systematic review of treatments for post-acute diarrheal consequences in children, including zinc, probiotics, and nutritional supplementation.
Figure 2
PRISMA-style flow diagram showing the systematic screening and selection of studies evaluating interventions to reduce long-term morbidity following childhood diarrheal disease.
flowchartFigure 3
Forest plot or evidence synthesis of zinc supplementation effects on reducing recurrent diarrhea and growth faltering in children following acute diarrheal episodes.
forest_plotFigure 4
Forest plot or evidence synthesis evaluating probiotic and nutritional interventions for preventing prolonged diarrhea and malnutrition in children after acute gastroenteritis.
forest_plotUsed In Evidence Reviews
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