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Oral zinc supplementation for the treatment of acute diarrhea in children: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Laura M Lamberti, Christa L Fischer Walker, Kit Y Chan, Wei-Yan Jian, Robert E Black
Meta-Analysis Nutrients 2013 89 цитирований
PubMed DOI PDF
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Study Design

Тип исследования
Meta-Analysis
Популяция
Children under 5 with acute diarrhea
Вмешательство
Oral zinc supplementation for the treatment of acute diarrhea in children: a systematic review and meta-analysis. 10-20 mg/day elemental zinc
Препарат сравнения
Placebo or ORS alone
Первичный исход
Duration and severity of acute diarrhea in children under 5
Направление эффекта
Positive
Риск систематической ошибки
Moderate

Abstract

Evidence supporting the impact of therapeutic zinc supplementation on the duration and severity of diarrhea among children under five is largely derived from studies conducted in South Asia. China experiences a substantial portion of the global burden of diarrhea, but the impact of zinc treatment among children under five has not been well documented by previously published systematic reviews on the topic. We therefore conducted a systematic literature review, which included an exhaustive search of the Chinese literature, in an effort to update previously published estimates of the effect of therapeutic zinc. We conducted systematic literature searches in various databases, including the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), and abstracted relevant data from studies meeting our inclusion and exclusion criteria. We used STATA 12.0 to pool select outcomes and to generate estimates of percentage difference and relative risk comparing outcomes between zinc and control groups. We identified 89 Chinese and 15 non-Chinese studies for the review, including studies in 10 countries from all WHO geographic regions, and analyzed a total of 18,822 diarrhea cases (9469 zinc and 9353 control). None of the included Chinese studies had previously been included in published pooled effect estimates. Chinese and non-Chinese studies reported the effect of therapeutic zinc supplementation on decreased episode duration, stool output, stool frequency, hospitalization duration and proportion of episodes lasting beyond three and seven days. Pooling Chinese and non-Chinese studies yielded an overall 26% (95% CI: 20%-32%) reduction in the estimated relative risk of diarrhea lasting beyond three days among zinc-treated children. Studies conducted in and outside China report reductions in morbidity as a result of oral therapeutic zinc supplementation for acute diarrhea among children under five years of age. The WHO recommendation for zinc treatment of diarrhea episodes should be supported in all low- and middle-income countries.

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nutrients

ISSN 2072-6643

www.mdpi.com/journal/nutrients Review

Oral Zinc Supplementation for the Treatment of Acute Diarrhea in Children: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Laura M. Lamberti 1, Christa L. Fischer Walker 1,*, Kit Y. Chan 2,3, Wei-Yan Jian 2 and Robert E. Black 1

  1. 1 Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA; E-Mails: [email protected] (L.M.L.); [email protected] (R.E.B.)
  2. 2 Department of Health Policy and Management, School of Public Health, Peking University Health Science Centre, 38 Xueyuan Rd. in Haidian District, Beijing 10083, China; E-Mails: [email protected] (K.Y.C.); [email protected] (W.-Y.J.)
  3. 3 Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh Medical School, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, Scotland EH8 9AG, UK

* Author to whom correspondence should be addressed; E-Mail: [email protected];

Tel.: +1-410-502-3478; Fax: +1-410-955-7159.

Received: 4 September 2013; in revised form: 9 October 2013 / Accepted: 4 November 2013 / Published: 21 November 2013

Abstract: Evidence supporting the impact of therapeutic zinc supplementation on the duration and severity of diarrhea among children under five is largely derived from studies conducted in South Asia. China experiences a substantial portion of the global burden of diarrhea, but the impact of zinc treatment among children under five has not been well documented by previously published systematic reviews on the topic. We therefore conducted a systematic literature review, which included an exhaustive search of the Chinese literature, in an effort to update previously published estimates of the effect of therapeutic zinc. We conducted systematic literature searches in various databases, including the China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), and abstracted relevant data from studies meeting our inclusion and exclusion criteria. We used STATA 12.0 to pool select outcomes and to generate estimates of percentage difference and relative risk comparing outcomes between zinc and control groups. We identified 89 Chinese and 15 non-Chinese studies for the review, including studies in 10 countries from all WHO geographic regions, and analyzed a total of 18,822 diarrhea cases (9469 zinc and 9353 control). None of the included Chinese studies had previously been included in

published pooled effect estimates. Chinese and non-Chinese studies reported the effect of therapeutic zinc supplementation on decreased episode duration, stool output, stool frequency, hospitalization duration and proportion of episodes lasting beyond three and seven days. Pooling Chinese and non-Chinese studies yielded an overall 26% (95% CI: 20%−32%) reduction in the estimated relative risk of diarrhea lasting beyond three days among zinc-treated children. Studies conducted in and outside China report reductions in morbidity as a result of oral therapeutic zinc supplementation for acute diarrhea among children under five years of age. The WHO recommendation for zinc treatment of diarrhea episodes should be supported in all low- and middle-income countries.

Keywords: zinc; children; global health; China

1. Introduction

In response to mounting evidence supporting the efficacy and effectiveness of therapeutic zinc supplementation for diarrhea among children under five years of age, the World Health Organization (WHO) and the United Nation’s Children Fund (UNICEF) issued a global recommendation in 2004, which advised zinc supplementation in addition to oral rehydration solution (ORS) for the treatment of all diarrhea episodes among children <5 years of age [1,2]. Systematic reviews have quantified the association between therapeutic zinc supplementation and a reduction in the duration and severity of childhood diarrhea episodes in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) [1,3,4]. Many of the studies contributing to this body of evidence were conducted in South Asia [5–7], but literature stemming from East Asia has not been included in past reviews. In 2011, Zhang published a systematic review which identified 11 Chinese studies assessing zinc treatment for diarrhea and signified the need to update previous meta-analyses with literature published in languages other than English [8].

We sought to conduct an extensive search for studies of oral therapeutic zinc supplementation published in Chinese and any other language. We also aimed to combine evidence across regions in order to generate global estimates of the effect of oral therapeutic zinc supplementation on selected morbidity and mortality outcomes among children under five years of age.

2. Methods

We conducted a systematic literature search for studies published in any language between 1980 and November 2012 using the MeSH search terms “zinc” and “diarrhea” limited to “humans” in the following databases: Biosis, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health (CINAHL), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Embase, the WHO International Clinical Trials Registry Platform (ICTRP), Global Health, Latin American and Caribbean Health Sciences Literature (LILACS), PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, IndMed, Egyptian Universities Library Consortium, Index Medicus for the Eastern Mediterranean Region (IMEMR), China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI), WanFang, and Chinese BioMedical (CBM) database.

Titles and abstracts were reviewed by two independent reviewers, and complete manuscripts were obtained for further review of pertinent studies. Discrepancies were resolved in consultation with a third reviewer. We restricted inclusion to individually randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of children under five years of age with acute diarrhea, including dysentery, where diarrhea was defined as the passage of at least three loose or watery stools in a 24-h period. We excluded cluster RCTs, studies that exclusively enrolled a particular subgroup of children (e.g., HIV-infected children; preterm infants), and studies of persistent diarrhea. We included RCTs assessing oral zinc supplementation of any zinc salt in comparison to a control group receiving placebo supplement. For studies conducted in China, where placebo supplements may not have been readily available, we included trials in which cases received the same supportive therapy regardless of zinc allocation. For all studies, administration of minerals (excluding iron), vitamins, and supporting therapy beyond zinc were only considered acceptable if these were received by both the intervention and control groups. Studies that used supplements that included iron, zinc-fortified ORS, or zinc-fortified foods were excluded.

Included studies were reviewed for the following outcomes: diarrhea duration; the proportion of diarrhea episodes lasting >3 and >7 days; duration of hospitalization; duration of fever; duration of vomiting; proportion of cases vomiting; stool frequency (number per day); stool output (mL); and death from diarrhea or any cause. Two independent reviewers entered data into structured tables, and discrepancies were resolved in consultation with a third reviewer.

We conducted independent analyses for studies assessing diarrhea due to unspecified causes and those assessing specific pathogens (e.g., rotavirus) that were laboratory confirmed prior to enrollment. All data analyses were conducted in STATA 12.0 [9]. We fit Poisson and logistic regression models to continuous and binary outcomes, respectively, weighting all outcomes by sample size. These models generated pooled estimates and 95% confidence intervals lower bound by zero for all outcomes and upper bound by one for proportions.

For continuous outcomes, we calculated the overall percentage difference between the pooled estimates for the zinc and control groups. For binary outcomes, we calculated estimates of relative risk (RR) with placebo as the reference group and conducted random effects meta-analyses to combine RRs across studies [9].

We conducted hypothesis testing to assess the equivalence of pooled outcomes and of effect estimates by placebo and non-placebo controlled trials. To compare effect estimates, we tested the difference of mean percentage differences for continuous outcomes and the ratio of relative risks (RRR) for binary outcomes [10]. We subsequently pooled placebo and non-placebo controlled trials for outcomes with no statistically significant difference in effect size.

We assessed the association between the dose of oral zinc supplement and diarrhea duration by regressing the mean percentage difference in diarrhea duration comparing the zinc and control groups onto a categorical variable which indicated whether zinc dose was lower than, equal to, or greater than the WHO recommendation.

During the course of our analyses, we identified a zinc product called Licorzinc that appeared to be unique to China. To determine whether outcomes for Chinese studies were generalizable comparing Licorzinc to other better established zinc products, we conducted hypothesis testing to assess the equivalence of the mean percentage difference in episode duration between zinc and placebo. We also

calculated the RRR to compare the RR of episodes lasting >3 days between studies using Licorzinc and other zinc products.

We plotted funnel plots to assess our primary outcomes for publication bias. We also employed the Child Health Epidemiology Reference Group (CHERG) grading system to assess the quality of evidence for each outcome on a four-point scale (“high”, “moderate”, “low”, “very low”) [11].

3. Results

The systematic literature search of the non-Chinese databases uncovered 4038 titles, and 15 were included after subsequent review of abstracts and full manuscripts for inclusion and exclusion criteria (Figure 1) [5–7,12–23]. Of the included studies, 13 were conducted in a hospital setting and two assessed episodes occurring in the community. Included studies were conducted in sites located within 10 countries: India (n = 6); Bangladesh (n = 5); Nepal (n = 1); Turkey (n = 1); Brazil (n = 1); Pakistan (n = 1); Ethiopia (n = 1); Yemen (n = 1); and Poland (n = 1). These studies enrolled a total of 3271 zinc-allocated and 3314 placebo-allocated diarrhea cases. The systematic literature search for Chinese studies resulted in 1520 titles, of which 89 were included (Figure 1) [24–112]. All included studies were conducted in a hospital setting, and 33 studies focused on diarrhea attributable to laboratory confirmed rotavirus. None of the included studies identified through the Chinese database were placebo-controlled; for Chinese studies, zinc and control groups received a range of supportive treatments, including fluid infusion, probiotics and antivirals. The total enrolment of included Chinese studies was 6198 zinc group and 6039 control group diarrhea cases. Table 1 describes the trial setting, sample size, and zinc intervention for all included studies.

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Table 1. Characteristics of included studies.

Sample Size

Specific Causative Organisms

Tablet or Syrup

Author [Reference]

Year Published

Trial Setting

Age Group (months)

Country

Zinc Salt

Zinc Group

Control Group

Al Sonboli [17] 2003 Brazil Hospital Unknown 3–60 37 37 Not Listed Tablet

Bahl [7] 2002 India Community Unknown 6–35 404 401 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Brooks [16] 2005 Bangladesh Hospital Unknown 1–6 91 93 Zinc Acetate Syrup 20 mg Duration of episode Brooks [16] 2005 Bangladesh Hospital Unknown 1–6 91 93 Zinc Acetate Syrup 5 mg Duration of episode

Dutta [23] 2011 India Hospital Unknown 6–24 44 41 Not Listed Syrup 40 mg 14 Elnemr [21] 2007 Yemen Hospital Unknown 3–24 88 92 Zinc Acetate Syrup 20 mg 14 Faruque [12] 1999 Bangladesh Hospital Unknown 6–24 343 341 Zinc Acetate Syrup 14.2 mg 15

Fischer Walker [19] 2006 Pakistan Hospital Unknown 1–5 281 279 Zinc Sulfate Tablet 10 mg 14 Fischer Walker [19] 2006 India Hospital Unknown 1–5 186 187 Zinc Sulfate Tablet 10 mg 14 Fischer Walker [19] 2006 Ethiopia Hospital Unknown 1–5 87 90 Zinc Sulfate Tablet 10 mg 14

Larson [18] 2005 Bangladesh Hospital Unknown 3–59 267 266 Zinc Sulfate Tablet 20 mg 10 Patel [20] 2009 India Hospital Unknown 6–59 264 271 Zinc Sulfate Syrup 20 mg 14

Patro [22] 2010 Poland Hospital Unknown 3–48 81 79 Zinc Sulfate Syrup

Polat [15] 2003 Turkey Hospital Unknown 2–29 52 54 Zinc Sulfate Syrup 20 mg 10 Roy [13] 1999 Bangladesh Hospital Unknown 3–24 32 35 Zinc Acetate Syrup 20 mg 14

Sachdev [5] 1988 India Hospital Unknown 6–18 25 25 Zinc Sulfate Tablet Sazawal [6] 1995 India Hospital Unknown 6–35 456 481 Zinc Gluconate Syrup 20 mg Not Listed

Strand [14] 2002 Nepal Community Unknown 6–35 442 449 Not Listed Syrup

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Table 1. Cont.

Zhao [24] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 4–36 40 40 Licorzinc Tablet

Zhang [25] 2009 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–24 60 60 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Lin [26] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 1.5–36 58 58 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Zhou [27] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–24 42 40 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Yang [28] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–36 42 40 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Liu [29] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 5–18 40 40 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Chen [30] 2006 China Hospital Rotavirus 0–24 30 30 Zinc gluconate

Not Listed

  1. Liu [31] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 6.8–22 90 90 Zinc Gluconate Tablet
  2. Liu [32] 2009 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 112 108 Zinc Gluconate Tablet 20 mg 10 Fu [33] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 2–24 98 102 Zinc Gluconate Syrup 5 mg Not Listed

Zhou [34] 2008 China Hospital Unknown 2–48 40 40 Licorzinc

Not Listed

Not Listed

Chen [35] 2008 China Hospital Rotavirus 4–48 60 60 Licorzinc

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Table 1. Cont.

Guan [36] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 1.5–45.6 45 45 Licorzinc

Not Listed

Wu [37] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 4–13 46 46 Licorzinc

Not Listed

Zhou [38] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 6–24 65 60 Licorzinc Tablet 20 mg Not Listed Luo [39] 2009 China Hospital rotavirus 6–36 55 50 Licorzinc Tablet 18.75 mg Not Listed

Zhang [40] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 5–48 50 50 Licorzinc

Not Listed

Ju [41] 2007 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 40 38 Licorzinc Tablet

Wang [42] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 30 30 Licorzinc Tablet Not Listed * 3

Hong [43] 2009 China Hospital Rotavirus 3–60 140 120 Zinc Sulfate Syrup

Lin [44] 1994 China Hospital Unknown 0.5–24 46 58 Zinc Sulfate Syrup

Yan [45] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 5–36 70 50 Zinc Sulfate Syrup

He [46] 1997 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 52 58 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Wei [47] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–36 44 42 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Yang [48] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 80 80 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

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Table 1. Cont.

Not Listed

Pu [49] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 0–24 38 34 Zinc Gluconate

Zhang [50] 2011 China Hospital Rotavirus 3–36 53 53 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Sun [51] 2008 China Hospital Unknown 1.5–36 45 45 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Zhang [52] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–36 90 90 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Lin [53] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–54 28 20 Zinc Gluconate Tablet 6–54 mos: 20 mg 14

Liu [54] 2009 China Hospital Unknown 3–36 95 91 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Qiao [55] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 73 72 Zinc Gluconate Tablet 6–36 mos: 20 mg 14

Zhang [56] 2007 China Hospital Unknown 0–24 85 90 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Zhao [57] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–24 70 70 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Cai [58] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 0–24 88 84 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Zhang [59] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–17 120 120 Zinc Gluconate Tablet 20 mg 10–14

Qiao [60] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–24 85 85 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Zhong [61] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 3–48 50 50 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Wang [62] 2011 China Hospital Rotavirus 0–24 60 60 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Not Listed

Yang [63] 2008 China Hospital Rotavirus 0–36 164 168 Zinc Gluconate

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Table 1. Cont.

Zhao [64] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–36 60 60 Zinc Gluconate Syrup 35 mg 10

Ma [65] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 4–42 41 41 Zinc Gluconate

Chen [66] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 0–36 93 93 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Not Listed

Hu [67] 2009 China Hospital Rotavirus 4–36 60 60 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Yuan [68] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 1–36 100 100 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Tan [69] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3-36 50 35 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Liu [70] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 89 77 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Hu [71] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–60 108 100 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Li [72] 2008 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 40 38 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Gao [73] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 3–36 74 74 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Wu [74] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–60 20 20 Zinc Sulfate Syrup 10 mg 10

Wu [74] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–60 20 20 Zinc Sulfate

Not Listed

Liu [75] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–60 54 53 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

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Table 1. Cont.

Not Listed

Chen [76] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 5–36 42 20 Zinc Gluconate

Ma [77] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 2–36 63 63 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Lu [78] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 6–18 120 140 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Ma [79] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 58 52 Zinc Gluconate Syrup 6–36 mos: 20 mg 10

Ao [80] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 0–24 87 80 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Gu [81] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–60 56 60 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Wen [82] 2006 China Hospital Unknown 0–24 30 29 Zinc Gluconate

Wang [83] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–36 60 60 Licorzinc

Not Listed

Not Listed

  1. Liu [84] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 8–30 90 90 Licorzinc
  2. Liu [85] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 3–60 100 100 Licorzinc Tablet

Tong [86] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 2–36 98 98 Licorzinc

Not Listed

Qiu [87] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 1–24 53 52 Licorzinc Tablet

Kong [88] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 3–30 35 35 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Not Listed

He [89] 2007 China Hospital Rotavirus 5–22 60 63 Zinc Gluconate

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Table 1. Cont.

Kang [90] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–36 92 80 Zinc Gluconate Tablet 20 mg 14

Su [91] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–36 97 97 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Huang [92] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 2–36 100 100 Not Listed Tablet

Zhang [93] 2006 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 83 63 Licorzinc Syrup

Wang [94] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 4–30 60 60 Zinc Gluconate Syrup 10 mg Not Listed

Lin [95] 2008 China Hospital Unknown 0.5–34 60 60 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Yan [96] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 6–60 57 57 Zinc Gluconate Tablet 20 mg 10

Yu [97] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 40 40 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Zhang [98] 2011 China Hospital Rotavirus 4–36 128 128 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Xu [99] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 2–36 84 83 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Tan [100] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 3.5–60 55 55 Zinc Gluconate Syrup

Shen [101] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 2.5–40 46 42 Zinc Gluconate

Not Listed

Wang [102] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 6–48 52 51 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

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Table 1. Cont.

Chen [103] 2011 China Hospital Unknown 1–36 50 50 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Meng [104] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–24 90 90 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Zhong [105] 2010 China Hospital Unknown 1–24 60 60 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Xie [106] 2010 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–36 128 124 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Fan [107] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 163 121 Not Listed

Not Listed

Zhou [108] 2012 China Hospital Rotavirus 6–24 75 75 Zinc Gluconate Syrup 20 mg 10–14

Zhao [109] 2008 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 44 43 Zinc Gluconate Tablet

Wan [110] 2006 China Hospital Unknown 6–36 26 24 Not Listed

Not Listed

Yang [111] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 6–60 60 60 Not Listed

Not Listed

Not Listed

Luo [112] 2012 China Hospital Unknown 0–36 168 196 Not Listed

* Study not included in dose analyses.

The results of the studies identified through non-Chinese databases are summarized in Tables 2 and 3. Acute episodes were 4% (95% CI: 1%–8%) shorter in duration among children treated with zinc compared to those receiving placebo (Table 2). Among children hospitalized for diarrhea, the duration of hospitalization was reduced by 37% (95% CI: 21%–53%) comparing the zinc and control groups (Table 2). Stool frequency was decreased by 6% (95% CI: 2%–10%) among zinc-treated children. Zinc-treated children had a reduced relative risk (RR) of acute diarrhea lasting beyond three and seven days and an increased risk of vomiting (RR: 1.83; 95% CI: 1.40–2.39) (Table 3).

Table 2. Pooled means of select outcomes for non-Chinese studies.

Study Sites 1

Pooled Mean (95% CI) 2

Percent Difference 3 N Zinc Group Control Group (%)

Outcome

Duration of Episode (days)

13 3.51 (3.43–3.60) 3.67 (3.59–3.76) −4.4 (−7.8, −1.0) Duration of Hospitalization (days)

1 2.00 (1.99–2.01) 3.17 (2.38–3.96) −36.9 (−52.6, −21.2) Stool Output (mL) 2 391.2 (388.5–393.8) 388.8 (386.2–391.5) 0.6 (−0.3, 1.6)

Stool Frequency (Number per day)

6 5.04 (4.88–5.19) 5.36 (5.20–5.52) −6.0 (−9.9, −2.0)

1 Individual studies may contribute more than one study site (N) to each estimate; 2 Estimates for ≥2 study sites generated by Poisson regression model weighted by sample size; 3 Percent difference calculated by: 100 × ((Pooled Zinc Estimate − Pooled Control Estimate)/Pooled Control Estimate); 95% CI calculated by: Percent Difference ± 1.96 × {|(meanzinc/meancontrol)| × sqrt[(std errorzinc)2/(meanzinc)2 + (std errorcontrol)2/ (meancontrol)2]} × 100.

Table 3. Pooled relative risk of select outcomes for non-Chinese studies.

Study Sites 1

Pooled Estimate Percentage (95% CI) 2

Pooled Relative Risk 3 N Zinc Group Control Group RR (95% CI)

Outcome

Episodes > 3 days (%) 3 29.7 (26.7–32.7) 39.5 (36.3–42.7) 0.78 (0.67–0.90) Episodes > 7 days (%) 6 10.3 (8.9–11.7) 14.9 (13.2–16.5) 0.74 (0.55–0.99)

Vomiting (%) 3 18.8 (16.0–21.6) 9.4 (7.3–11.4) 1.83 (1.40–2.39)

1 Individual studies may contribute more than one study site (N) to each estimate; 2 Estimates for ≥2 study sites generated by logistic regression model weighted by sample size; 3 Estimates for ≥2 studies generated by random effects meta-analysis.

Outcomes pooled across studies conducted in China showed reductions in the duration of diarrhea, hospitalization, fever, vomiting, stool output and stool frequency among zinc-treated children with acute diarrhea attributable to rotavirus and to non-specific causes (Table 4). The reduction in the duration of diarrhea was 37% (95% CI: 35%–39%) among non-specific episodes and 31% (95% CI: 29%–34%) among rotavirus episodes (Table 4). The RR of diarrhea lasting beyond three days was reduced among zinc-treated patients with non-specific (RR: 0.73; 95% CI: 0.66–0.79) and rotavirus (RR: 0.70; 95% CI:

  1. 0.63–0.78) diarrhea (Table 5; Figures 2 and 3).

Table 4. Pooled means of select outcomes for Chinese studies.

Study Sites 1

Pooled Mean (95% CI) 2

Specific Causative Pathogens

Percent Difference 3 N Zinc Group Control Group (%)

Outcome

Duration of Episode (days)

Unknown 40 2.96 (2.90–3.03) 4.68 (4.60–4.77) −36.8 (−38.7, −34.8) Rotavirus 24 3.45 (3.36–3.54) 5.01 (4.89–5.12) −31.1 (−33.5, −28.8)

Duration of Hospitalization (days)

Unknown 10 4.65 (4.50–4.80) 6.43 (6.25–6.61) −27.7 (−30.8, −24.6) Rotavirus 2 4.15 (3.79–4.51) 6.1 (5.66–6.54) −32.0 (−39.6, −24.3)

Duration of Fever (days)

Unknown 13 1.90 (1.80–1.99) 2.81 (2.70–2.92) −32.4 (−36.5, −28.2) Rotavirus 4 1.96 (1.78–2.14) 3.18 (2.95–3.41) −38.4 (−45.6, −31.2)

Duration of Vomiting (days)

Unknown 6 1.15 (1.05–1.25) 1.53 (1.41–1.64) −24.8 (−33.3, −16.4) Rotavirus 3 1.84 (1.64–2.04) 2.49 (2.26–2.72) −26.1 (−36.6, −15.6)

Unknown 1 40 (38.1–41.9) 70 (68.0–72.0) −42.9 (−46.0, −39.7) Rotavirus 1 278.4 (256.8–300.0) 425.4 (382.1–468.7) −34.6 (−42.9, −26.2)

Stool Output (mL)

Stool Frequency (Number per day)

Unknown 1 4 (3.8–4.2) 8 (7.6–8.4) −50.0 (−53.5, −46.5) Rotavirus 2 3.74 (3.30–4.18) 4.27 (3.77–4.77) −12.4 (−27.0, 2.1)

1 Individual studies may contribute more than one study site (N) to each estimate; 2 Estimates for ≥2 study sites generated by Poisson regression model weighted by sample size; 3 Percent difference calculated by: 100 × ((Pooled Zinc Estimate − Pooled Control Estimate)/Pooled Control Estimate); 95% CI calculated by: Percent Difference ± 1.96 × {|(meanzinc/meancontrol)| × sqrt[(std errorzinc)2/(meanzinc)2 + (std errorcontrol)2/(meancontrol)2]} × 100.

Table 5. Pooled relative risk of select outcomes for Chinese studies.

Study Sites 1

Pooled Estimate Percentage (95% CI) 2

Specific Causative Pathogens

Relative Risk 3 N Zinc Group Control Group RR (95% CI)

Outcome

Episodes > 3 days (%)

Unknown 44 31.4 (29.4–33.5) 49.2 (46.6–51.8) 0.73 (0.66–0.79) Rotavirus 29 31.8 (29.5–34.1) 50.3 (47.4–53.3) 0.70 (0.63–0.78)

Episodes > 7 days (%)
Unknown 1 26.9 (-) 39.2 (-) 0.75 (0.42–1.37)

1 Individual studies may contribute more than one study site (N) to each estimate; 2 Estimates for ≥2 study sites generated by Poisson regression model weighted by sample size; 3 Estimates for ≥2 studies generated by random effects meta-analysis.

We did not identify any studies reporting diarrhea-specific or all-cause mortality for inclusion in this review. Nor did we identify non-Chinese studies reporting duration of fever or vomiting, or Chinese studies reporting the proportion of children vomiting.

The mean episode duration and proportion of episodes lasting >3 days were not statistically significantly different comparing zinc-treated children in Chinese and non-Chinese studies. There was no statistically significant difference between the estimated relative risk of an episode lasting >3 days (RRR: 1.07; 95% CI: 0.90–1.27) comparing Chinese and non-Chinese studies; therefore, we pooled this outcome across regions (RR: 0.74; 95% CI: 0.68–0.80) (Figure 3). The percentage difference between the mean episode duration of zinc-treated and control group children was statistically significantly larger for Chinese compared to non-Chinese studies (p < 0.05), so this outcome was not pooled across regions. We did not have sufficient power to compare other commonly reported outcomes by region.

Figure 2. Forest plot for the effect of therapeutic zinc supplementation on Rotavirus diarrhea episodes >3 days.

Zinc dose was not associated with the mean percent difference in diarrhea duration comparing zinc and control children for non-Chinese (p = 0.50) or Chinese (p = 0.12) studies. Comparing Chinese studies that used Licorzinc to those that used other zinc supplements, there were no statistically significant differences in the mean percent difference in the duration of rotavirus episodes (p = 0.56), the RR of non-specific episodes lasting >3 days (RRR: 0.99; 95% CI: 0.72–1.35), or the RR of rotavirus episodes lasting >3 days (RRR: 0.93; 95% CI: 0.68–1.26). The percentage difference in the mean duration of non-specific episodes comparing zinc and control group children was statistically significantly higher for Licorzinc compared to “other zinc” studies (p = 0.01).

Our assessment of publication bias yielded largely symmetrical funnel plots for all outcomes. Under the CHERG grading system, the studies included in this review were of moderate quality

(Table 6) [11]. Effect estimates were largely consistent in directionality for all outcomes.

Figure 3. Forest plot for the effect of therapeutic zinc supplementation on non-specific diarrhea episodes lasting >3 days.

Nutrients 2013, 5

Table 6. Quality assessment of studies measuring the association between therapeutic zinc supplementation and selected outcomes.

Number of Studies

Design Limitations Consistency Generalizability to

Population of Interest Diarrhea Duration (mean): Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

All but 4 studies showing decreased mean duration of diarrhea among zinc-treated children (+1)

Mostly South Asia and

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

53 non-specific 24 Rotavirus

RCT

China (− Diarrhea Duration (>3 days): Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

All studies showing decreased risk of diarrhea duration >3 days among zinc-treated children (+1)

Mostly South Asia and

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

47 non-specific 29 Rotavirus

RCT

China (− Diarrhea Duration (>7 days): Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

All but one study showing decreased risk of diarrhea duration >7 days among zinc-treated children (+1)

Mostly South Asia and

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

7 non-specific RCT

China (− Hospitalizations Duration: Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

11 non-specific

  1. 2 Rotavirus
  2. 3 non-specific

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

All but one study showing decreased stool output among zinc-treated children (+1)

Only South Asia and

RCT

China (− Stool Frequency: Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

1 Rotavirus

All but three studies showing decreased stool frequency among zinc-treated children (+1)

Mostly South Asia and China (−

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

7 non-specific 2 Rotavirus

RCT

Nutrients 2013, 5

Table 6. Cont.

Vomiting: Moderate outcome-specific quality 1 3 non-specific RCT None

All studies showing increased vomiting among zinc-treated children (+1)

No Chinese studies ( Vomiting Duration: Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

All but one study showing decreased duration of vomiting among zinc-treated children (+1)

No non-Chinese

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

6 non-specific 3 Rotavirus

RCT

studies (− Fever Duration: Moderate outcome-specific quality 1

Chinese studies not placebo-controlled (−0.5)

All studies showing decreased duration of fever among zinc-treated children (+1)

No non-Chinese studies (−

13 non-specific 4 Rotavirus

RCT

1 Quality assessment scoring based on previously published criteria [11].

4. Discussion

The findings of our systematic review confirm and highlight the benefits of therapeutic zinc supplementation for diarrhea among children under five years of age in low- and middle-income countries. The effects of zinc treatment, which include reductions in episode duration, stool output, stool frequency and length of hospitalization, were consistent across Chinese and non-Chinese studies and non-specific and rotavirus diarrhea. These results suggest that zinc therapy of diarrhea is largely beneficial and important in both low- and middle-income settings.

The results of the large number of Chinese trials in rotavirus diarrhea are a substantial addition to the global evidence base because there have been no non-Chinese trials. One study in India based on a post-hoc subgroup analysis suggested that zinc treatment was not beneficial for rotavirus diarrhea [113]; however, the evidence from China demonstrates that therapeutic zinc supplementation reduces the duration and severity of rotavirus episodes. As rotavirus is the predominant cause of severe acute diarrhea worldwide and most likely the leading cause of diarrhea mortality [114], zinc treatment of rotavirus diarrhea could potentially yield large reductions in hospitalizations and deaths.

In comparison to non-Chinese studies, the difference between the mean episode duration of zinc-treated and control group children was statistically significantly higher for Chinese studies (p < 0.05). It is possible that this difference resulted from lack of placebo-controlled groups and blinding among Chinese studies. However, estimates of the effects of therapeutic zinc supplementation on other outcomes were largely consistent across study locations and we were able to generate a pooled global effect size for the proportion of episodes >3days. The consistency of effect estimates between studies conducted in and outside China suggests that the lack of placebo-controlled groups in Chinese studies did not greatly bias the results.

Zinc dose did not affect the estimate of the effect of zinc supplementation on the duration of diarrhea for non-Chinese or Chinese studies. Although Licorzinc was associated with slightly greater reductions in the mean duration of non-specific diarrhea than other zinc products, zinc effect sizes were generally comparable across Chinese studies regardless of type of zinc preparation.

There is a dearth of literature meeting our inclusion criteria that assessed diarrhea-specific and all-cause mortality. Although a previous review published mortality effect estimates [4], the sole study reporting diarrhea-specific deaths was cluster-randomized and thus violated our inclusion criteria [115]. In addition, three studies of all-cause mortality were also excluded from our review; one was on persistent diarrhea [116], and two others were review papers [3,117].

Using previously published scoring criteria, the studies included in our review yielded pooled estimates of overall moderate quality [11]. The majority of studies contributing to this review were conducted in China and South Asia; however, studies conducted outside Asia were consistent in the directionality of effect estimates. The consistency and quality of all outcomes bolsters the evidence in support of oral zinc supplementation for the treatment of acute diarrhea among children under five in low- and middle-income countries.

5. Conclusions

Oral therapeutic zinc supplementation reduces the morbidity of acute diarrhea among children under five in and outside China. Global efforts should be made to support scale-up of the WHO recommended regimen of therapeutic zinc in all regions.

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Figures

Figure 1

PRISMA flow diagram documenting the systematic literature search and study selection process for the meta-analysis of oral zinc supplementation in children with acute diarrhea.

flowchart

Figure 2

Forest plot from the meta-analysis of oral zinc supplementation for acute diarrhea in children, displaying effect sizes for diarrhea duration outcomes across included randomized controlled trials.

forest_plot

Figure 3

Forest plot from the meta-analysis of oral zinc supplementation for acute diarrhea in children, displaying effect sizes for diarrhea duration outcomes across included randomized controlled trials.

forest_plot

Figure 4

Meta-analytic results examining the effect of therapeutic zinc supplementation on diarrhea severity in children under five, with subgroup analyses by geographic region or zinc formulation.

forest_plot

Figure 5

Meta-analytic results examining the effect of therapeutic zinc supplementation on diarrhea severity in children under five, with subgroup analyses by geographic region or zinc formulation.

forest_plot

Figure 6

Subgroup analysis from the zinc supplementation meta-analysis, stratifying results by study location, zinc dose, or patient age to assess heterogeneity in treatment effects on diarrhea outcomes.

forest_plot

Figure 7

Subgroup analysis from the zinc supplementation meta-analysis, stratifying results by study location, zinc dose, or patient age to assess heterogeneity in treatment effects on diarrhea outcomes.

forest_plot

Figure 8

Sensitivity analysis or funnel plot from the systematic review of zinc treatment for childhood diarrhea, evaluating publication bias and robustness of the pooled effect estimates.

chart

Figure 9

Sensitivity analysis or funnel plot from the systematic review of zinc treatment for childhood diarrhea, evaluating publication bias and robustness of the pooled effect estimates.

chart

Figure 10

Additional meta-analytic data from the zinc supplementation review, presenting secondary outcomes such as stool frequency or vomiting incidence in zinc-treated versus control groups.

forest_plot

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