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Can optimisation of dietary vitamin E intake by pregnant women reduce the risk of asthma in their children: a feasibility study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 November 2010

J. Clark
Affiliation:
Section of Population Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, UK
L. C. A. Craig
Affiliation:
Section of Population Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, UK
G. McNeill
Affiliation:
Section of Population Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, UK
G. Devereux
Affiliation:
Section of Population Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB25 2ZD, UK
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2010

It has been suggested that the recent increase in asthma is, in part, a consequence of changing diet. Three large birth cohort studies from the US, UK and Japan(Reference Devereux, Turner and Craig1Reference Miyake, Sasaki and Tanaka3) have reported sub-optimal maternal intakes of vitamin E containing foods during pregnancy to be associated with an increased likelihood of childhood wheeze and asthma. However, a high-quality randomised placebo-controlled trial is required to investigate whether the optimisation of maternal vitamin E intake during pregnancy actually reduces childhood asthma. We have conducted a pilot study in preparation for a larger intervention study to determine whether pregnant women would participate and whether a dietitian supervised dietary intervention could increase maternal vitamin E intake to the 15 mg/d recommended by the US NIH in the absence of UK recommendation.

Forty-three pregnant women with a personal or partner history of asthma were recruited to the study at 12 weeks gestation and randomised to dietary intervention (n 23) or observation (n 20). Four women did not complete the study. A dietitian assessed the vitamin E intake of 19 women in the intervention group and provided tailored advice on dietary changes to optimise their intake to 15 mg/d. The remaining 20 women were not given dietary advice and acted as a control group.

* P values 12 vs 18/20 weeks.

Pregnant women with a personal and/or partner history of asthma were willing to participate in the study (recruitment rate 70% of those approached). The dietary intervention was associated with an increase in vitamin E intake from 7.13 mg/d (95% CI 5.63, 18.6) at 12 weeks gestation to 17.4 mg/d (95% CI 14.4, 20.5), P<0.001 at 18 weeks gestation when assessed by food diary and an increase from 10.9 mg/d (95% CI 8.50, 13.3) to 15.9 mg/d (95% CI 12.4, 19.4), P=0.008, when assessed by FFQ. No increase in dietary vitamin E intake was observed in the control group. The study demonstrates the feasibility and effectiveness of the dietary intervention to optimise dietary vitamin E intake and justifies the inclusion of the dietary intervention in a multicentre vitamin E intervention study to prevent childhood asthma.

This study was funded by the Scottish Office (Chief Scientist Office).

References

1.Devereux, G, Turner, SW, Craig, LCA et al. (2006) Reduced maternal vitamin E intake during pregnancy is associated with asthma in 5-year-old children. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 174, 499507.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2.Litonjua, AA, Rifas-Shiman, S, Ly, NP et al. (2006) Maternal antioxidant intake in pregnancy and wheezing illnesses in children at 2 y of age. Am J Clin Nutr 84, 903911.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3.Miyake, Y, Sasaki, S, Tanaka, K et al. (2010) Consumption of vegetables, fruit and antioxidants during pregnancy and wheeze and eczema in infants. Allergy (In the Press).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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