Impact of Provitamin a Biofortified Maize Flour Consumption on Dark Adaptation in Zambian Children
Amanda Palmer *
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
Alain Labrique
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
Katherine Healy
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
Maxwell Barffour
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
Ward Siamusantu
National Food & Nutrition Commission, Lusaka, Zambia.
Justin Chileshe
Tropical Diseases Research Centre, Ndola, Zambia.
Keith P. West, Jr.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Objectives: Approximately one third of children in developing countries are deficient in vitamin A (VA). Of these, 5.2 million are affected by night blindness—a severe impairment in dark adaptation. ProVA biofortified “orange” maize has been introduced in Africa as a potential intervention to address VA deficiency. We tested the impact of regular orange maize flour consumption on dark adaptation in preschool-aged children.
Methods: This was a cluster-randomized trial of children aged 4-8 years (n=1,024; 50 clusters) in Mkushi, Zambia comparing orange maize to conventional white maize. A random subsample (n=542) was assessed pre- and post-intervention using a portable field dark adaptometer to record pupillary response to varying light stimuli (-2.9 to 0.1 c/m2). We measured pre- and post-stimuli pupil diameter using Tracker video analysis software and calculated the % change (i.e., “responsiveness”). Pupillary threshold was defined as the lowest stimulus causing a ≥20% reduction in pupil diameter.
Results: At baseline, children assigned to orange maize were less responsive than those in the white group to all light stimuli. After the six-month intervention, pupillary responsiveness in the orange group improved across all stimuli. No consistent changes in responsiveness were observed in the white group. Pupillary threshold scores improved in 47% of orange group children versus 35% in the control arm. Improvements were more pronounced among children who consumed >75% of the maize meal provided, compared to those with lower compliance.
Conclusions: Regular consumption of proVA biofortified maize flour improved dark adaptation in a marginally VA deficient population.