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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 68, 187-192, Copyright © 1998 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc


ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS

Vitamin A supplementation and severity of pneumonia in children admitted to the hospital in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

WW Fawzi, RL Mbise, MR Fataki, MG Herrera, F Kawau, E Hertzmark, D Spiegelman and G Ndossi
Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA. mina@hsph.harvard.edu

Vitamin A deficiency and acute lower respiratory tract infections coexist as important public health problems in many developing countries. We carried out a randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled trial to examine whether large doses of vitamin A given to Tanzanian children who are admitted to the hospital with nonmeasles pneumonia would reduce the severity of respiratory disease. Six hundred eighty-seven children were randomly assigned to receive either placebo or vitamin A [200 000 IU (60 mg retinol equivalents) for children > 1 y of age and 100000 IU (30 mg retinol equivalents) for infants] on the day of admission and another dose on the following day. Of the 346 children in the vitamin A group, 13 died in the hospital, compared with 8 of 341 children in the placebo group; the relative mortality was 1.63 (95% CI: 0.67, 3.97; P = 0.28). The mean number of days of hospitalization was the same in both groups (4.2 d). There were no differences between the vitamin A and placebo groups in the duration of hospital stay when examined within categories of children stratified by age, sex, breast-feeding status, nutritional status at baseline, or quartile of dietary vitamin A intake in the 4 mo before admission to the hospital. There were also no differences in the mean number of days of fever, rapid respiratory rate, or hypoxia, whether these endpoints were examined in the total number of subjects or in a subset with more severe clinical conditions at baseline. Large doses of vitamin A had no protective effect on the course of pneumonia in hospitalized Tanzanian children.


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