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Eggs for Gut Health

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The Washington University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Stunting
Severe Acute Malnutrition
Environmental Enteric Dysfunction
Moderate Acute Malnutrition

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Micronutrient sprinkles
Dietary Supplement: Supercereal Plus
Drug: Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine
Dietary Supplement: Corn powder
Dietary Supplement: Whole egg powder

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06002438
202306090

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this clinical trial is to test egg powder supplementation in children with moderate acute malnutrition in Sierra Leone. The main question it aims to answer is:

  • Will provision of 15g of whole egg powder per day during and after treatment for moderate acute malnutrition (for 24 weeks total) improve small intestinal permeability and linear growth among 6-30 month old Sierra Leonean children compared with daily corn powder supplementation?

Full description

Undernutrition in children manifests as wasting, stunting, or both. While wasting is generally responsive to high-quality nutritional interventions, stunting is less so. Affected children are at increased risk of acute and chronic illnesses, have reduced neurocognitive development, lower academic achievement, reduced adult earning potential, and shortened lifespans. Given that stunting affects over 140 million children at any one time, the costs incurred are deep and broad, particularly among children in sub-Saharan Africa, where nearly half of the world's population growth is expected to occur over the next 30 years. Part of the challenge of treating stunting has been attributed to environmental enteric dysfunction (EED), an acquired small intestine disorder characterized by chronic inflammation, villus blunting, and impaired nutrient absorption. EED is prevalent in the same populations plagued by stunting, develops concurrently with loss in linear growth, and has explained upwards of 43% of observed growth faltering. EED has recently also been found in over 75% of children with moderate acute malnutrition (MAM, moderate wasting) in Sierra Leone, a population with high rates of deterioration to severe acute malnutrition and death, 20%. EED is a plausible cause for this treatment resistance, and for the high rates of recurrence seen in these children. There is an urgent need to increase understanding of the concurrence of stunting, EED, and wasting, and to test interventions targeted to their pathological underpinnings. Dietary egg can play a critical role in the fight against malnutrition by providing abundant high-quality protein and nutrients essential for physical and cognitive recovery. One egg/day has been shown to reduce stunting in several contexts. Recent evidence has shown that short-term egg/bovine colostrum supplement given to 9-12-month-old Malawian children improved linear growth and intestinal permeability in children with severe EED. It is possible that prolonged supplementation with egg in a high-risk population in rural Sierra Leone could improve acute and long-term health trajectories for children and put eggs on the map for food aid. This will be a randomized, investigator-blinded, controlled clinical trial testing whether daily supplementation with 15g whole egg powder during and for 18 weeks after treatment for moderate acute malnutrition might reduce intestinal permeability and improve linear growth, among other outcomes, when compared with control corn powder. Children with relatively higher risk MAM will be enrolled (MUAC < 12.5 cm AND MUACz < -2), treated with Supercereal Plus for up to 6 weeks, and undergo urine and stool collections at 6, 12, and 24 weeks. Urine collections will be for assessment of lactulose permeability and will involve participant consumption of a known amount of lactulose and collection of all urine over at least 4 hours thereafter. Stool collections will be for fecal host mRNA transcripts and selected proteins. Participants will also receive intermittent malaria chemoprophylaxis.

Enrollment

461 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 30 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • At least 6 months of age and less than 30 months of age
  • Mid-upper arm circumference >= 11.5cm and < 12. 5 cm
  • Mid-upper arm circumference-for-age z-score < -2
  • Provision of signed (or thumb-printed) and dated informed consent form
  • Stated willingness to comply with all study procedures and availability for the duration of the study, including no plan to move from the catchment area of a participating clinic

Exclusion criteria

  • Nutritional edema
  • Simultaneous involvement in another research trial or supplementary feeding program
  • Chronic debilitating illness
  • Allergy to egg
  • Receipt of treatment for acute malnutrition within 1 month prior to screening

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

461 participants in 2 patient groups

Egg powder
Experimental group
Description:
15g egg powder per day for 24 weeks
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Whole egg powder
Drug: Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine
Dietary Supplement: Supercereal Plus
Dietary Supplement: Micronutrient sprinkles
Corn powder
Active Comparator group
Description:
15g corn powder per day for 24 weeks
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Corn powder
Drug: Sulfadoxine pyrimethamine
Dietary Supplement: Supercereal Plus
Dietary Supplement: Micronutrient sprinkles

Trial contacts and locations

10

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Central trial contact

Mark J Manary, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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