4.6 Article

Regional, Socioeconomic, and Dietary Risk Factors for Vitamin B-12 Deficiency Differ from Those for Folate Deficiency in Cameroonian Women and Children

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 145, Issue 11, Pages 2587-2595

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3945/jn.115.210195

Keywords

vitamin B-12; folate; fortification; breast milk; Cameroon

Funding

  1. Michael and Susan Dell Foundation
  2. USDA
  3. ARS Western Human Nutrition Research Center
  4. Sight and Life
  5. UNICEF

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Representative data on folate and vitamin B-12 dietary intake and status in low-income countries are rare, despite the widespread adoption of folic acid fortification. Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate folate and vitamin B-12 intake, status, and risk factors for deficiency before implementation of a national fortification program in Cameroon. Methods: A nationally representative cross-sectional cluster survey was conducted in 3 ecologic zones of Cameroon (South, North, and the 2 largest cities, Yaounde/Douala), and information on dietary intake was collected from 10 households in each of 30 randomly selected clusters per zone. In a subset of women and their 12- to 59-mo-old children (n = 396 pairs), plasma folate and vitamin B-12, as well as breast milk vitamin B-12, were analyzed. Results: Vitamin B-12 and folate dietary intake patterns and plasma concentrations were similar for women and children. In the subsample, 18% and 29% of women and 8% and 30% of children were vitamin 3-12 (<= 221 pmol/L) and folate (<10 nmol/L) deficient, respectively. Mean dietary folate ranged from 351 mu g dietary folate equivalents/d in the North to 246 mu g dietary folate equivalents/d in Yaounde/Douala; plasma folate was negatively associated with socioeconomic status (P = 0.001). Plasma vitamin 3-12 deficiency was similar in the South and North, 29% and 40%, respectively, but was only 11% in Yaounde/Douala, and was positively associated with socioeconomic status. Mean breast milk vitamin B-12 was statistically significantly lower in the North (101 pmol/L) than in the South (296 pmol/L) or Yaounde/Douala (349 pmol/L). Conclusions: Folate intake and status are inadequate among women and young children in Yaounde/Douala, whereas low vitamin 3-12 intake and status are more common in poor and rural area, especially in the North. Different strategies may be needed to control deficiency of these nutrients in different regions of Cameroon.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available