Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

The MAL-ED Study: A Multinational and Multidisciplinary Approach to Understand the Relationship Between Enteric Pathogens, Malnutrition, Gut Physiology, Physical Growth, Cognitive Development, and Immune Responses in Infants and Children Up to 2 Years of Age in Resource-Poor Environments

2014; Oxford University Press; Volume: 59; Issue: suppl 4 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1093/cid/ciu653

ISSN

1537-6591

Autores

Angel Mendez Acosta, César Banda Chávez, J. T. Flores, Maribel Paredes Olotegui, Sylvia Rengifo Pinedo, D. R. Trigoso, A. O. Vasquez, Imran Ahmed, Dewan S Alam, Asad Ali, Zulfiqar A Bhutta, S. Qureshi, Sadia Shakoor, Sajid Soofi, Ali Turab, Aisha K. Yousafzai, Alizeh Zaidi, Ladaporn Bodhidatta, Carl J. Mason, Sudhir Babji, Anuradha Bose, Sushil John, Gagandeep Kang, Biji T. Kurien, Jayaprakash Muliyil, Venkata Raghava Mohan, Anup Ramachandran, Amy Rose, W. Pan, Ramya Ambikapathi, D. Carreon, Vivek Charu, Dabo Liu, Vivian Doan, Jhanelle Graham, Christel Hoest, Stacey Knobler, D R Lang, Benjamin McCormick, Monica McGrath, MA William L Miller, Archana Mohale, G. Nayyar, Stephanie Psaki, Zeba Rasmussen, Stephanie A Richard, Jessica C. Seidman, V. Wang, Rachel Blank, Michael Gottlieb, Karen H. Tountas, Caroline Amour, Estomih Mduma, Tahmeed Ahmed, A.M. Shamsir Ahmed, M. Dinesh, Fahmida Tofail, Rashidul Haque, Iqbal Hossain, Mamunul Islam, Mustafa Mahfuz, Ram K. Chandyo, Prakash Shrestha, Rita Shrestha, Manjeswori Ulak, Robert E. Black, Laura E. Caulfield, William Checkley, P. Chen, Margaret Kosek, G. Lee, Pablo Peñataro Yori, Laura E. Murray‐Kolb, Barbara A. Schaefer, Laura Pendergast, Celina Monteiro Abreu, Alexandre Havt, Hilda Costa, Alessandra Di Moura, José Quirino Filho, Álvaro M. Leite, Aldo Â. M. Lima, Noélia L. Lima, Inês Lima, Bruna Leal Lima Maciel, Maria Elisabete Amaral de Moraes, Francisco Suetônio Bastos Mota, Reinaldo B. Oriá, Josiane da Silva Quetz, Alberto M. Soares, Erling Svensen, S. Tor, Crystal L. Patil, Pascal Bessong, Cloupas Mahopo, A. Mapula, C. Nesamvuni, E. Nyathi, Amidou Samie, Leah J. Barrett, Jean Gratz, Richard L. Guerrant, Eric R. Houpt, L. Olmsted, W. Petri, James A Platts-Mills, Rebecca J. Scharf, Binod Shrestha, Sanjaya K. Shrestha,

Tópico(s)

Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues

Resumo

Highly prevalent conditions with multiple and complex underlying etiologies are a challenge to public health. Undernutrition, for example, affects 20% of children in the developing world. The cause and consequence of poor nutrition are multifaceted. Undernutrition has been associated with half of all deaths worldwide in children aged <5 years; in addition, its pernicious long-term effects in early childhood have been associated with cognitive and physical growth deficits across multiple generations and have been thought to suppress immunity to further infections and to reduce the efficacy of childhood vaccines. The Etiology, Risk Factors, and Interactions of Enteric Infections and Malnutrition and the Consequences for Child Health (MAL-ED) Study, led by the Fogarty International Center of the National Institutes of Health and the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health, has been established at sites in 8 countries with historically high incidence of diarrheal disease and undernutrition. Central to the study is the hypothesis that enteropathogen infection contributes to undernutrition by causing intestinal inflammation and/or by altering intestinal barrier and absorptive function. It is further postulated that this leads to growth faltering and deficits in cognitive development. The effects of repeated enteric infection and undernutrition on the immune response to childhood vaccines is also being examined in the study. MAL-ED uses a prospective longitudinal design that offers a unique opportunity to directly address a complex system of exposures and health outcomes in the community-rather than the relatively rarer circumstances that lead to hospitalization-during the critical period of development of the first 2 years of life. Among the factors being evaluated are enteric infections (with or without diarrhea) and other illness indicators, micronutrient levels, diet, socioeconomic status, gut function, and the environment. MAL-ED aims to describe these factors, their interrelationships, and their overall impact on health outcomes in unprecedented detail, and to make individual, site-specific, and generalized recommendations regarding the nature and timing of possible interventions aimed at improving child health and development in these resource-poor settings.

Referência(s)