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  • The Efficacy of Amino Acid Supplementation in Treating Environmental Enteric Dysfunction Among Children at Risk of Malnutrition

    Closed for proposals

    Project Type

    Coordinated Research Project

    Project Code

    E43036

    CRP

    2197

    Approved Date

    24 February 2021

    Status

    Active - Ongoing

    Start Date

    23 February 2021

    Expected End Date

    30 June 2027

    Participating Countries

    France
    Ghana
    India
    Malawi
    Morocco
    Philippines
    United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
    United States of America
    Zambia

    Description

    Environmental Enteric Dysfunction (EED) is caused by subclinical infection due to enteric pathogens that thrive in conditions of poor sanitation and hygiene. It is characterized by villous atrophy, crypt hyperplasia, increased intestinal permeability, inflammatory cell infiltrate, and possibly nutrient malabsorption. The increased gut permeability, often measured by oral lactulose and mannitol test, is related to gut barrier dysfunction, with translocation of pathogenic organisms and endotoxins. EED is known to be an important component of the causal origin of undernutrition and stunting in infants in low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs) as it reduces the efficacy of nutritional interventions with food supplements to restore normal growth and allow catch-up growth. In order to improve these conditions that contribute to poor child growth it is required to minimise EED and improve nutrition by combining improvements in water quality, sanitation and nutritional intervention. Protein supply is a major contributor to support normal growth and catch-up growth, but very few data are available on the impact of EED on protein and amino acid requirement, protein digestion and amino acid absorption and metabolic availability to support growth. Targeted nutrient therapies (such as supplementation with specific amino acids) may be one such approach. The objective of this CRP is to use a combination of nuclear techniques to assess the response of EED to a short course of targeted amino acid supplementation. Specifically, the CRP will aim to 1) develop a combined minimally invasive protocol for the application of the dual stable isotope tracer method for protein digestion (DSIT) and the 13-C Sucrose Breath Test (13-C SBT) to assess nutrient absorption in the context of EED; 2) test the applicability of combined DSIT and 13-C SBT to understand the interaction between EED and protein metabolism and; 3) asses the efficacy of amino acid supplementation on the treatment of EED in children. The CRP will provide the evidence base to enable Member States to formulate policies to improve optimal child growth and development. Further, the CRP results would contribute to the revision of the global clinical management and feeding regimens for stunted children complicated with or without EED, for the promotion of linear growth and the reduction in morbidity and mortality of vulnerable children in LMICs.
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    Objectives

    To use a combination of existing nuclear techniques to assess the response of EED to a short course of targeted amino acid supplementation among children.

    Specific objectives

    To develop and test the applicability of a combined minimally invasive protocol for the dual stable isotope tracer method for protein digestion (DSIT) and the 13-C Sucrose Breath Test (13-C SBT) to assess nutrient absorption in the context of EED.

    To assess the interaction between EED and protein metabolism

    To assess the efficacy of amino acid supplementation on the treatment of EED in children.

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