Open Access
Exposure to multiple mycotoxins, environmental enteric dysfunction and child growth: Results from the AflaCohort Study in Banke, Nepal
Author(s) -
AndrewsTrevino Johanna,
Webb Patrick,
Shrestha Robin,
Pokharel Ashish,
Acharya Sudikshya,
Chandyo Ram,
Davis Dale,
Baral Kedar,
Wang JiaSheng,
Xue Kathy,
Ghosh Shibani
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
maternal and child nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.181
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1740-8709
pISSN - 1740-8695
DOI - 10.1111/mcn.13315
Subject(s) - underweight , medicine , mycotoxin , odds ratio , ochratoxin a , cohort , aflatoxin , anthropometry , confidence interval , fumonisin , environmental health , toxicology , zoology , food science , overweight , body mass index , biology
Abstract Evidence of the impact of exposure to multiple mycotoxins and environment enteric dysfunction (EED) on child growth is limited. Using data from a birth cohort study, the objectives of this study were to (a) quantify exposure to multiple mycotoxins (serum aflatoxin [AFB 1 ] and ochratoxin A [OTA], urinary fumonisin [UFB 1 ] and deoxynivalenol [DON]), as well EED (lactulose:mannitol [L:M] ratio); (b) examine the potential combined effects of multiple mycotoxin exposure and EED on growth. Multivariate regressions were used to identify associations between growth measurements (length, weight, anthropometric z ‐scores, stunting and underweight) at 24–26 months of age and exposure to mycotoxins and EED at 18–22 months ( n = 699). Prevalence of AFB 1 , DON, OTA and UFB 1 exposure ranged from 85% to 100%; average L:M ratio was 0.29 ± 0.53. In individual mycotoxin models, AFB 1 exposure was negatively associated with weight, WAZ, increased odds of stunting (odds ratio [OR]: 1.28, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.08, 1.52; p = 0.004) and underweight (OR: 1.18, 95% CI: 1.00, 1.38; p = 0.046). Irrespective of other mycotoxin exposure and presence of EED, AFB 1 was negatively associated with length, weight, head circumference, LAZ and WAZ, and with increased odds of stunting and underweight, UFB 1 was associated with increased odds of underweight, and DON was negatively associated with head circumference. EED was associated with the impaired length and weight. These findings suggest that certain mycotoxins and EED may have independent impacts on different facets of growth and that aflatoxin dominates such impacts. Thus, programs reducing exposure to mycotoxin and EED through multi‐sectoral nutrition‐sensitive interventions have the potential to improve child growth.