Journal ArticleOpen Access
A microbiome-directed therapeutic food for children recovering from severe acute malnutrition
Author Affiliations
Washington University in St. Louis, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Technical University of Denmark, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, ...
Published InScience Translational Medicine
Year2024
Citations16
Abstract
Globally, severe acute malnutrition (SAM), defined as a weight-for-length z -score more than three SDs below a reference mean (WLZ < −3), affects 14 million children under 5 years of age. Complete anthropometric recovery after standard, short-term interventions is rare, with children often left with moderate acute malnutrition (MAM; WLZ −2 to −3). We conducted a randomized controlled trial (RCT) involving 12- to 18-month-old Bangladeshi children from urban and rural sites, who, after initial hospital-based treatment for SAM, received a 3-month intervention with a microbiome-directed complementary food (MDCF-2) or a calorically more dense, standard ready-to-use supplementary food (RUSF). The rate of WLZ improvement was significantly greater in MDCF-2–treated children ( P = 8.73 × 10 −3 ), similar to our…
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