4.5 Article

Reference cut-offs to define low serum zinc concentrations in healthy 1-19 year old Indian children and adolescents

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 76, Issue 8, Pages 1150-1157

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41430-022-01088-4

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust/Department of Biotechnology India Alliance Clinical/Public Health Research Centre [IA/CRC/19/1/610006]
  2. Indian Council of Medical Research, Govt of India

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study derived reference serum zinc concentration (SZC) cut-offs for apparently healthy Indian children and adolescents, and measured the prevalence of zinc deficiency. The findings showed that the present study's SZC cut-offs were lower than the international standards, indicating a lower prevalence of zinc deficiency in India.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Population zinc (Zn) status assessment is based on serum zinc concentration (SZC) cut-offs defined by the International Zinc Nutrition Consultative Group (IZiNCG). The objective of this study is to derive reference SZC cut-offs in apparently healthy 1-19 year Indian children and adolescents using comprehensive national nutrition survey (CNNS) data, and to measure the prevalence of Zn deficiency. SUBJECTS/METHODS: Apparently healthy children (n = 12,473) were selected from the CNNS, by including the highest 2 wealth quintiles, and excluding stunted, thin and obese children, and those with CRP > 5 mg/L, anaemia, hypo-albuminemia, diabetes, recent diarrhoea and history of smoking. The 2.5th centile of age-based distributions defined the SZC cut-offs, used to measure the prevalence of Zn deficiency in India, as against the IZiNCG cut-offs. RESULTS: The present study SZC cut-offs were significantly lower, by 10-18 mu g/dL, than the IZiNCG cut-offs; more in adolescents. Prevalence of Zn deficiency in the entire CNNS, with these cut-offs, was 2.7 (<10 years) to 5.5 (10-19 years) times lower than with the IZiNCG cut-offs. No geographical state, nor any age group, had Zn deficiency as a serious public health problem (>= 20%). In contrast, with IZiNCG cut-offs, 9-27 states (depending on age group) had a public health problem. CONCLUSIONS: The present study reference SZC cut-offs for Zn deficiency are lower than the IZiNCG cut-offs, and their rigorous selection from a national sample makes them more appropriate for use in India. A re-examination of the global applicability of IZiNCG recommended cut-offs in other LMICs appears appropriate.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available