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Clinical Trial
. 1993 Nov 27;342(8883):1325-8.
doi: 10.1016/0140-6736(93)92246-p.

Supplementation with vitamin A and iron for nutritional anaemia in pregnant women in West Java, Indonesia

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Supplementation with vitamin A and iron for nutritional anaemia in pregnant women in West Java, Indonesia

D Suharno et al. Lancet. .

Abstract

Nutritional anaemia, thought to be caused by iron deficiency, affects 50-70% of pregnant women in the developing world. The influence of vitamin A and iron supplementation was studied in anaemic pregnant women in West Java, in a randomised, double-masked, placebo-controlled field trial. 251 women aged 17-35 years, parity 0-4, gestation 16-24 weeks, and haemoglobin between 80 and 109 g/L were randomly allocated to four groups: vitamin A (2.4 mg retinol) and placebo iron tablets; iron (60 mg elemental iron) and placebo vitamin A; vitamin A and iron; or both placebos, all daily for 8 weeks. Maximum haemoglobin was achieved with both vitamin A and iron supplementation (12.78 g/L, 95% Cl 10.86 to 14.70), with one-third of the response attributable to vitamin A (3.68 g/L, 2.03 to 5.33) and two-thirds to iron (7.71 g/L, 5.97 to 9.45). After supplementation, the proportion of women who became non-anaemic was 35% in the vitamin-A-supplemented group, 68% in the iron-supplemented group, 97% in the group supplemented with both, and 16% in the placebo group. Improvement in vitamin A status may contribute to the control of anaemic pregnant women.

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Comment in

  • Vitamin A, iron, and haemopoiesis.
    Thurnham DI. Thurnham DI. Lancet. 1993 Nov 27;342(8883):1312-3. doi: 10.1016/0140-6736(93)92239-p. Lancet. 1993. PMID: 7901629 No abstract available.

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