Abstract

Background: Epidemiological studies have demonstrated that folate, iodine and iron intake during pregnancy impacts on foetal brain development and cognitive function. However, in human studies, the relationship with other dietary nutrients is less clear. Objective: This systematic review aims to critically appraise the current literature and meta-analyses results from nutritional interventions during pregnancy that aimed to optimise infant and child cognitive outcomes. Design: Ten electronic databases were searched for articles published up to August 2017. The search was limited to articles published in English. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) testing the impact of any nutritional intervention (dietary counselling, education, nutrient supplementation, fortified foods and/or foods) during pregnancy on cognitive outcomes of children (<10 years old). Two independent reviewers assessed study eligibility and quality using the American Dietetic Association quality criteria checklist for primary research. Standardised mean differences were used for nine cognitive domains to measure effects for meta-analyses. Results: A total of 34 RCTs were included (21 studies included children aged less than 35 months, 10 studies included children aged 36–60 months and 3 studies included children aged 61–119 months). The types of nutritional interventions included nutrient supplements, whole foods, fortified foods and nutrition education. The following nine cognition outcomes: attention, behaviour, crystallised intelligence, fluid intelligence, global cognition, memory, motor skills, visual processing, and problem solving were not significantly impacted by nutritional interventions, although 65% of studies conducted post-hoc data analyses and were likely to be underpowered. Although, long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFA) supplementation was associated with a marginal increase in crystallised intelligence (Effect size (ES): 0.25; 95% confidence interval (95% CI): −0.04, 0.53), the effect was not statistically significant (p = 0.09), with significant study heterogeneity (p = 0.00). Conclusions: LCPUFA supplementation may be associated with an improvement in child crystallised intelligence, however further research is warranted. The remaining eight cognition domains were not significantly impacted by maternal nutritional interventions.

Highlights

  • Adequate nutrition during the prenatal period and early years of life is essential for brain development and cognitive function

  • Analysed the impact of maternal nutritional interventions on child cognition, this review focused on short-term cognitive outcomes in children under the age of two years in developing countries

  • This systematic review resulted in 34 included publications after inclusion and exclusion criteria were applied to full texts

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Summary

Introduction

Adequate nutrition during the prenatal period and early years of life is essential for brain development and cognitive function. Iodine is necessary for neural cell migration and differentiation, synaptogenesis and myelination [8], while dietary iron is necessary for neurogenesis and dopamine production [9,10,11]. Deficiency in these nutrients are known to compromise brain development and cause significant cognitive impairment in the offspring [8,12]. The importance of an adequate intake of folate, iodine and iron during pregnancy for foetal brain development has been well explored; the developmental role of other dietary nutrients (e.g., zinc, long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFAs)) remains unclear from human studies. Objective: This systematic review aims to critically appraise the current literature and meta-analyses results from nutritional interventions during pregnancy that aimed to optimise infant and child cognitive outcomes

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