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Project Grow Smart: Intervention Trial of Multiple Micronutrients and Early Learning Among Infants in India

Innovative Strategies to Promote Early Child Development Among Low-income Rural Infants and Preschoolers in India Through Multiple Micronutrient Fortification and Early Learning Opportunities

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01660958
Acronym
GrowSmart
Enrollment
834
Registered
2012-08-09
Start date
2012-08-31
Completion date
2014-12-31
Last updated
2019-08-16

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Nutritional Deficiencies, Developmental Delay

Keywords

Micronutrient Deficiencies, Early Child Development, Infant Growth, Iron Deficiency

Brief summary

Project Grow Smart evaluates the impact fortification with multiple micronutrient powders (MNP) vs. placebo (one vitamin) on child development (primary outcome) and on micronutrient status, growth, and morbidity (secondary outcomes) among young children in rural India (Nalgonda district of Telegana). There is an infant phase and a preschool phase; investigators, study team members, and participants are unaware of whether the fortification is MNP vs. placebo. The infant phase (enrollment age: 6-14 months) is a 4-cell factorial randomized trial (MNP vs. placebo and early learning vs. routine care), conducted through home visits. Sachets (MNP/placebo) are distributed to be mixed with food. The hypotheses in the infant phase are: 1) MNP leads to better development, growth, and micronutrient status; 2) Early learning leads to better development; 3) Integrated MNP plus early learning leads to better development through both additive and synergistic processes. Developmental evaluations and anthropometric measurements are conducted at baseline, mid-line (6 months), and end-line (12 months). Blood draws for micronutrient status are performed at baseline and endline. Morbidity measures are collected monthly using a morbidity form, modeled after the Demographic and Health Survey. The preschool phase (enrollment age: 30-48 months) is conducted in Anganwadi Centers (AWC) (preschools). AWC are classified as high or low stimulation, based on an objective observational rating system of the physical environment of the preschools and teacher-child interactions. Preschools are categorized into high/low-quality based on median split, followed by random assignment of MNP/placebo nested within high/low-quality preschools. The hypotheses in the preschool phase are: 1)MNP leads to better development, growth, and micronutrient status; 2) the effect of the MNP on preschoolers' development varies by the quality of the AWC, with stronger effects among preschoolers in high-quality AWCs. The intervention has been modified to coincide with the academic term (September-May). Evaluations are conducted at baseline (September) and end-line (prior to May), with an 8-month intervention period.

Detailed description

Project Grow Smart has two phases: an infant phase and a preschool phase. The design of the two phases differs, although both evaluate the impact of fortification with multiple micronutrient powders (MNP) vs. placebo on child development. In the infant phase, 6-14 month old infants are recruited and randomized into one of four cells to receive: placebo, placebo plus early learning, MNP alone, and MNP plus early learning (integrated intervention). Interventions are delivered through biweekly (twice/month) home visits by Village Level Workers. Families of all infants receive information on iron rich foods. The preschool phase is conducted in 22 Anganwadi Centers (AWC) (i.e., preschools). AWC quality is assessed, based on a 109-item observation scale, organized into 18 categories, based on two validated scales: Early Childhood Environment Rating Scale-Revised (ECERS-R) and HOME Inventory, modified to rate the quality of learning opportunities and teacher-child interactions. After training and establishing inter-rater reliability, two psychologists spend four hours in each preschool and independently complete the observation. Scores are summed and averaged. Based on a median split, preschools are categorized into high/low-quality with random assignment of MNP/placebo nested within high/low-quality preschools. Classifications are unknown by investigators, study team, or preschools. The preschool protocol has been modified to ensure that the trial coincides with the academic term (September-May) to avoid losing the oldest children who transfer to private or primary schools. Baseline evaluations are conducted in September and end-line evaluations are conducted prior to May. Mid-line evaluations have been eliminated. The intervention is delivered over 8 months. The MNP/placebo was supplied to preschools in identical packets of 200 grams, including two measuring spoons of 1 and 0.5 grams. Each packet includes a manufacturer-assigned alphabetic code. AWC workers mix the MNP/placebo into the first bites of the preschoolers' mid-day meal. Mothers receive information on iron-rich food.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTMNP

The formulation of the multiple micronutrient powder (MNP) was based on low micronutrient intake, low bioavailability of iron and zinc in the Indian diet, and current World Health Organization (WHO)and Indian recommendations regarding fortification and age-specific nutrient requirements. The MNP formulations were produced by a certified company in India and include: Iron, Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Folic Acid, Zinc, Vitamin B12 Vitamin B2, plus filler (maltodextrin). Placebo included riboflavin and maltodextrin.

BEHAVIORALEarly Learning

• Infant will benefit from interventions that are based on responsive parenting, whereby caregivers respond to children's cues, provide opportunities for exploration, and engage in nurturant and reciprocal communication.

Sponsors

Indian Council of Medical Research
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
The Mathile Institute for the Advancement of Human Nutrition
CollaboratorOTHER
Micronutrient Initiative
CollaboratorOTHER
University of Maryland, Baltimore
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
FACTORIAL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Intervention model description

* The infant phase is a factorial design. * The preschool phase is a cluster-randomized trial (MNP/placebo nested within high/low-quality preschools).

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
6 Months to 48 Months
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Participating children must be in one of two age groups: infants: 6-14 months or preschoolers: 30-48 months, inclusive, at time of recruitment. * Participants must reside in the Nalgonda district of Telengana, India. * Preschoolers must attend an Anganwadi Center (preschool) in the Nalgonda district that is participating in Project Grow Smart. * Participating caregivers must be at least 18 years of age at the time of recruitment.

Exclusion criteria

* Children with chronic diseases, developmental disabilities, mental retardation, or severe physical handicaps will be excluded * Children with severe stunting ( \<= -3 standard deviation of length-for-age z-score) or severe anemia (hemoglobin \< 7 g/dl) will be excluded and referred to a local hospital for evaluation and intervention, as needed..

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Infants: Change in cognitive, language, motor, and socio-emotional developmentBaseline, Mid-Point (6mo post BL), and End-Point (12mo post BL)Data on infants' cognitive, language, motor, and socio-emotional development will be collected at baseline, the 6 month follow-up evaluation, and the 12-month follow-up evaluation using the Mullens Scales of Early Learning.
Preschoolers: Change in cognitive, language, motor, and socio-emotional developmentBaseline and End-Point (8mo post BL)Data on preschoolers' cognitive, language, motor, and socio-emotional development will be collected at baseline and the 8-month follow-up evaluation using the Mullens Scales of Early Learning.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Infants: Change in weight and heightBaseline, Mid-Point (6mo post BL), and End-Point (12mo post BL)Data on infants' weight and height will be collected at baseline, the 6 month follow-up evaluation, and the 12-month follow-up evaluation
Preschoolers: Change in weight and heightBaseline and End-Point (8mo post BL)Data on preschoolers' weight and height will be collected at baseline and the 8-month follow-up evaluation
Infants: Change in micronutrient StatusBaseline and End-Point (12 mo post-baseline)Data on infants' micronutrient status (serum ferritin, transferrin receptor, serum zinc, C-reactive protein) and hemoglobin will be collected at baseline and the 12-month follow-up evaluation.
Preschoolers: MorbidityBaseline and once a month (for 8mo post BL)Morbidity measures (acute respiratory infection and diarrhea) are conducted monthly using a morbidity form, modeled after the Demographic and Health Survey.
Infants: MorbidityBaseline and once a month (for 12mo post BL)Morbidity measures (acute respiratory infection and diarrhea) are conducted monthly using a morbidity form, modeled after the Demographic and Health Survey.
Preschoolers: Change in micronutrient StatusBaseline and End-Point (8mo post BL)Data on preschoolers' micronutrient status (serum ferritin, transferrin receptor, serum zinc, C-reactive protein) and hemoglobin will be collected at baseline and the 8-month follow-up evaluation.

Countries

India

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 8, 2026