ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Biolizin for Improving Functional Poor Appetite in Children Aged 6 to 36 Months (CTBE2502)

H

Haiphong University of Medicine and Pharmacy

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Appetite Disorders
Feeding and Eating Disorders of Childhood
Functional Poor Appetite

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Biolizin
Behavioral: Standardized caregiver counseling on responsive feeding

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07153549
Protocol No.: CTBE.25.02 (Other Identifier)
CTBE.25.02

Details and patient eligibility

About

Functional poor appetite is common in young children and may be linked to suboptimal micronutrient intake and feeding behavior. This study evaluates whether a zinc-containing oral supplement (Biolizin syrup) can improve eating behavior in children aged 6 to 36 months who have poor appetite without an identifiable medical cause. Participants are followed for 42 days with clinic visits at Day 0, Day 7, Day 21, and Day 42. Caregivers complete validated questionnaires about feeding difficulties and eating behavior; the child's weight and length/height are measured at each visit. Safety is assessed through review of adverse events and routine laboratory tests; serum zinc may be measured according to the protocol. The primary outcome is the change from baseline to Day 42 in the total score of a validated feeding-difficulty scale. Secondary outcomes include changes in Children's Eating Behaviour Questionnaire (CEBQ) subscales, WHO growth indices, serum zinc (if measured), and overall safety

Full description

Poor appetite in toddlers often reflects a combination of nutritional and behavioral factors. Zinc is an essential trace element that contributes to taste perception, mucosal integrity, and appetite regulation; suboptimal zinc status may exacerbate reduced intake and feeding problems. Biolizin is an oral zinc-containing supplement intended to support appetite and healthy feeding behavior in young children. The study aims to determine whether the supplement, provided together with standardized caregiver counseling on responsive feeding practices, improves caregiver-reported feeding difficulty and eating behavior over 42 days. After consent and screening, eligible children attend visits at Day 0, Day 7 (±2), Day 21 (±3), and Day 42 (±4). At each visit, clinicians review medical history and concomitant treatments, record anthropometrics, and caregivers complete a validated Vietnamese feeding-difficulty scale (0-24, higher scores indicate worse difficulty) and the CEBQ subscales. The study product is taken orally per age-based dosing specified in the protocol; adherence is checked using dosing diaries and returned bottle counts where applicable. Safety laboratories (e.g., complete blood count, liver and renal chemistry) are planned at baseline and Day 42; serum zinc may be obtained according to protocol. Adverse events are collected from consent through Day 42 and are managed according to clinical judgment; expected reactions are generally mild (for example, gastrointestinal discomfort, taste changes, or rash). Source data are recorded in case report forms and entered into a secure database with audit trails, and only de-identified data are used for analysis or sharing. The study has ethics approval and written informed consent is obtained from caregivers before any procedures.

Enrollment

110 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 36 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 6 to 36 months at screening.

  • Functional poor appetite for ≥2 weeks with at least one of the following:

    • Clearly reduced intake versus usual (lower amount of food and/or fewer meals per day);
    • Prolonged meal duration (>30 minutes per meal);
    • Refusal or avoidance of familiar foods previously accepted;
    • Oppositional feeding behaviors (turning away, crying, gagging/retching, prolonged food holding, lack of cooperation during meals).
  • No obvious organic cause of poor appetite (e.g., acute infection, gastrointestinal/metabolic disease).

  • Weight not below -2 SD compared with WHO growth standards.

  • Parent/guardian provides written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Ongoing acute or chronic illnesses that can affect intake or absorption, including but not limited to:

    • Acute infections (e.g., tonsillitis, pneumonia, otitis media, viral febrile illness, acute diarrhea);
    • Chronic conditions affecting digestion or metabolism (e.g., celiac disease, malabsorption syndromes, chronic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, diabetes).
  • Neurodevelopmental or neurological conditions that impair feeding (e.g., cerebral palsy, autism spectrum disorder, global developmental delay).

  • Current or recent use of medications known to alter appetite or digestion/absorption (e.g., systemic corticosteroids, antiepileptics, prolonged antibiotics).

  • Use of zinc-containing products or other appetite stimulants within 7 days before screening.

  • Known hypersensitivity to any component of the study product.

  • Malabsorption, severe malnutrition, or requirement for specialized nutrition, including:

    • Confirmed or suspected malabsorption (e.g., celiac disease, severe lactose intolerance, short bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel disease);
    • Severe malnutrition per WHO criteria (e.g., weight-for-length Z-score < -3 SD, nutritional edema, marked loss of subcutaneous fat/muscle);
    • Physician-prescribed specialized nutrition plans (therapeutic formulas for cow's milk protein allergy, severe malnutrition, tube feeding, or individualized nutrition regimens beyond usual diet).
  • Nonadherent caregiver or high risk of loss to follow-up as judged by the investigator.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

110 participants in 2 patient groups

Biolizin Syrup + Standardized Caregiver Counseling
Experimental group
Description:
Children receive an oral zinc-containing dietary supplement (Biolizin syrup) for 42 days, dosed by age per protocol, together with standardized caregiver counseling on responsive feeding at each study visit (Day 0, Day 7, Day 21, Day 42). Adherence is monitored with dosing diaries and returned bottle counts. Use of other zinc-containing products or appetite stimulants is not permitted. Outcomes (feeding-difficulty score, CEBQ subscales, anthropometrics, and safety labs) are collected per schedule
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standardized caregiver counseling on responsive feeding
Dietary Supplement: Biolizin
Counseling Only (Standardized Feeding-Behavior Counseling)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Children receive the same standardized caregiver counseling on responsive feeding at each study visit (Day 0, Day 7, Day 21, Day 42) without Biolizin or any other zinc-containing supplement. Education materials, visit frequency, and assessments match the experimental arm. Concomitant appetite stimulants or zinc products are not allowed. Outcomes are collected per the same schedule.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Standardized caregiver counseling on responsive feeding

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Phuong Thi Thu Nguyen, MD, PhD; Anh Van Tran, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems