CHild malnutrition & Adult NCD: Generating Evidence on mechanistic links to inform future policy/practice (CHANGE project)

Lead Research Organisation: London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Department Name: Epidemiology and Population Health

Abstract

THE PROBLEM:
Child malnutrition is a major global public health problem and includes both undernutrition and overweight/obesity. Wasting (low weight-for-height) is a particularly severe form of undernutrition. Affecting some 49 million children globally, it contributes to 900,000 deaths per year in children aged <5 years (12% of total deaths). Whilst severe malnutrition treatment programmes do exist, problems limiting their success include the need to:
a) ENSURE THAT CHILDREN THRIVE AS WELL AS SURVIVE
Current programmes focus on averting the immediate risks of malnutrition-associated death. They don't account for increasing evidence that survivors often fail to thrive and are at greater risk of non-communicable disease (NCD) in later life e.g. heart disease, diabetes and obesity. Mechanisms causing this are poorly understood.
b) UNDERSTAND & MEASURE MORE MEANINGFUL OUTCOMES
Current programmes focus on return to normal weight as a marker of success. What really matters however is health. Predicting future ill health is especially difficult since risks laid down in childhood do not become apparent as adult NCD till many years later.
c) QUESTION ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT WEIGHT GAIN
Current programmes often see rapid return to normal weight as desirable and thus encourage fast catch-up growth. However, studies in high income countries show that too rapid a weight gain in small infants causes harm by increasing risk of future NCDs. Whether this also applies to low-income settings is unknown.

THE PLAN:
AIMS: To improve future treatment programmes by better understanding how child malnutrition affects the risk of long-term (adult) NCD.
OBJECTIVES: 1) To understand how the speed and pattern of post-malnutrition weight gain affects the risks of adult NCD
2) To develop simple blood/urine tests to predict which survivors of child malnutrition are most at risk of future NCD

THE TEAM:
We will bring together teams from 4 countries: Jamaica, Malawi, Ethiopia, UK and combine clinical and lab data from 4 groups (cohorts) of adolescents/adults who survived early life malnutrition. In Ethiopia and Malawi, we will recruit 2 more cohorts of at-risk infants so we can learn from their progress. Combining these datasets and bringing together varied scientific skills and disciplines will achieve together what no one team could achieve alone.

THE BENEFITS:
1) PROGRESS TOWARDS THE 2030 SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGs)
If we succeed in our aim of informing better future treatment programmes we thus contribute to two major SDGs and their targets:
>>SDG 2 (END HUNGER)
>> SDG 3 (GOOD HEALTH & WELL-BEING)
These in turn impact numerous others e.g. education, economic development
2) ENHANCED MALNUTRITION-RELATED ADVOCACY
Effective advocacy is vital to generate the sufficient political will and sufficient resources to tackle malnutrition. The 'double-burden' of malnutrition (i.e. coexistence of undernutrition alongside overweight/obesity/NCDs) is increasingly common even in the world's poorest countries. By describing how one form affects the other, we hope that researchers, policy-makers and nutrition programmes managers will better be able to balance short vs long term risks and focus on 'double-duty' actions benefitting both. This could open up valuable new funding streams. It could also be a more effective and cost-effective solution to the global NCD epidemic.
3) IMPROVED SEVERE MALNUTRITION TREATMENT PROGRAMMES
Likely changes would be minor and thus easily/rapidly scalable, e.g. use of the same therapeutic foods but prescribed at lower dose so that weight recovery is neither too slow nor too fast.
4) NEW BLOOD/URINE TESTS TO MEASURE NCD RISK IN MALNOURISHED CHILDREN
Being able to measure a problem is key to tackling it. Simple new tests arising from our work would enable researchers/programmers to better understand if nut.>NCD programmes are succeeding.

Technical Summary

WP1: DATA SYNTHESIS/STANDARDIZATION
Our project involves data from 7 distinct patient cohorts. We will first harmonise available datasets, highlighting common variables & agreeing on joint data strategies & definitions of exposure/outcomes

WP2: UNDERSTANDING HOW POST-MALNUTRITION-WEIGHT-GAIN (PMWG) INFLUENCES RISK OF NCD (towards objective 1)
Existing data from 3 prospective cohorts forms a natural experiment whereby:
-Jamaica-LION involved inpatient treatment for malnutrition and overall had the fastest rates of PMWG
-Ethiopia-ACAM was outpatient-only and had slowest PMWG
-Malawi-ChroSAM was mixed in/outpatient and had intermediate PMWG
Secondary analysis will explore inter-?ra-site PMWG and its association with NCD variables already captured in the datasets

WP-3: DESCRIBING BIOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MALNUTRITION SURVIVORS (obj. 2a)
Old blood samples from J-LION, M-ChroSAM, E-ACAM cohorts will be combined with new blood/urine samples collected from Malawi-2002-4 and Ethiopia-1980s famine cohorts. Metabolomic and lipidomic analysis will attempt to identify differences between: malnutrition survivors vs controls; survivors with/without NCD

WP-4: DESCRIBING BIOCHEMICAL PROFILES OF DIFFERENT PATTERNS OF PMWG (obj. 2b)
Blood/urine samples will be collected from two new cohorts: an observational birth cohort in Malawi; a cohort nested in an Ethiopian RCT. Metabolic/lipidomic profiles of different post-malnutrition growth patterns will be described

WP-5: IDENTIFYING BIOCHEMICAL SIGNATURES LINKING PMWG & NCD RISK (obj. 2c)
Data from WP3&4 will be compared. Biochemical markers common to early malnutrition/PMWG and later NCD can be used in future work as early markers of NCD risk

WP-6: GRIPP (Getting Research into Policy/Practice) & Stakeholder engagement/research co-creation (towards overall AIM)
Qualitative work will explore views of PMWG & malnutrition/NCD risk. A follow-on RCT will be co-created with key stakeholders to maximise impact

Planned Impact

Main potential impacts arising from our work include:
1) PROGRESS TOWARDS THE 2030 SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGs)
We focus on child undernutrition and later life NCD. If we succeed in our aim of informing better future treatment programmes we thus contribute to two major SDGs and their targets:
>>SDG 2 (END HUNGER) Target 2.2: End all forms of malnutrition, including achieving ... internationally agreed targets on stunting and wasting in children
>> SDG 3 (GOOD HEALTH & WELL-BEING) Target 3.4: Reduce by one third premature mortality from non-communicable diseases through prevention & treatment
These in turn impact numerous others since nutrition and health are closely related to: the ability to benefit from education (SDG4); gender equality (SDG5); employment (SDG8); inequalities (SDG10)

2) MALNUTRITION-RELATED ADVOCACY (incl. "Double Burden", "Double Duty" advocacy)
Effective advocacy is vital to generate the sufficient political will and sufficient resources to tackle malnutrition. Though "positive" results are often easier to work with, advocates can use even 'negative' studies to highlight needs and lobby for resources. Ours is thus a 'safe' investment. Even in a worst case scenario that we don't succeed in our project objectives (identifying PMWG as a mechanism towards future NCD; identifying NCD biomarkers) we can still make valuable contributions towards local, national and international advocacy efforts in the field. Whatever our final results, our work will:
>> Highlight that undernutrition and overweight/obesity/NCD are important and related problems needing urgent solutions through "double duty actions" which benefit both
>> Inspire others to search for other mechanisms/biomarkers (or elucidate further details of ones we do identify)
For this reason, advocates will be among our stakeholders in WP6. Our dissemination plans include:
>> Direct advocacy - via papers, reports, social media posts we write & events we organize
>>Indirect advocacy - via policy briefs and result we share to other advocates to use in their work.

Among our advocacy messages we will note that climate change is a serious global threat and there is a real danger that natural disasters will lead to resurgent food crises and famines: this makes the task of optimising treatments for undernutrition as important as ever.


3) IMPROVED SEVERE MALNUTRITION TREATMENT PROGRAMMES
We focus on PMWG as our key "nutrition>>NCD" mechanism since potential for it to be directly modifiable is high. This would be done via small, hence scalable, changes to the dose of therapeutic food prescribed in severe malnutrition treatment packages. We acknowledge that RCT-level evidence would be needed to verify our project findings experimentally before wide-scale change to current protocols. It is to speed this process that we directly include planning of such an RCT into our project timeline.

4) NEW METRICS (NCD BIOMARKER TESTS) TO MEASURE PROGRESS
Measuring a problem is key to tackling it. It is very rarely possible, even in research contexts to track malnourished children till adulthood to determine whether or not they develop NCD. If our search for early-life biomarkers of preclinical and clinical NCD risk succeeds, then such long term follow-up will not be needed. Benefits of an intervention on NCD can be assessed much earlier in life via presence/absence of those biomarkers. This will help others in the search for 'double duty' actions and interventions

Publications

10 25 50

 
Description We continue to publish papers arising from earlier work packages associated with this award. We are also presenting at practitioner as well as at academic conferences. This is leading programmers/policy-makers to more carefully consider long term as well as short-term outcomes following child malnutrition.
Exploitation Route As new WHO guidelines are rolled out there is increasing awareness of the importance to INVEST in malnutrition (since it has many adverse long-term outcomes as well as short term risks). It is too early to note other more definitive outcomes.
Sectors Healthcare

 
Description There was some discussion of the issue of optimal rate of weight gain at the WHO Malnutrition Guideline Development Group meeting. It is too early for our project to have definitive results for policy, but getting the issue on the agenda is an important first step. We hope that in future rounds of the WHO guidelines there will be more discussion/policy-guidance on this issue.
First Year Of Impact 2023
Sector Healthcare
Impact Types Policy & public services

 
Description MAMI Global Network (co-chair)
Geographic Reach Multiple continents/international 
Policy Influence Type Contribution to new or improved professional practice
Impact Many organizations are now doing MAMI infant nutrition programme: these are inspired, helped and indirectly supported by us at the MAMI Global Network, including via monthly "implementors' meeting" and by many links and coversations that arise via the group. Several of us are also involved in the WHO Guideline Development Group - infants aged <6m are a key population being considered by WHO in this process.
URL https://www.ennonline.net/ourwork/research/mami
 
Description Member of WHO Guideline Development group for Severe Malnutrition 2021, 2022, 2023
Geographic Reach Multiple continents/international 
Policy Influence Type Participation in a guidance/advisory committee
Impact Though final guidelines are still not out the process is already influencing the work and thinking of the global experts who are, like myself, part of the WHO Guideline Development Group. Our work has been discussed in the guideline meetings: both MAMI infant malnutrition work and CHANGE project work of weight gain post malnutrition. 2024 update Final WHO guidelines have now been released. Our work has fed into these: - The approach to infants u6m at risk of poor growth and development is very heavily informed on our MAMI care pathway, developed over many years https://www.ennonline.net//mediahub/blog/mami-and-the-new-2023-who-recommendations-on-at-risk-infants-under-6-months - The paucity of evidence around optimal rates of weight gain (and hence what energy rations are optimal) is being addressed by the CHANGE project.
URL https://app.magicapp.org/#/guideline/noPQkE/section/n32P8W
 
Description Teaching and training future global health leaders and practitioners at LSHTM
Geographic Reach Multiple continents/international 
Policy Influence Type Influenced training of practitioners or researchers
Impact In my teaching role at LSHTM I have multiple opportunties to teach and train (as well as learn from) our Msc and PhD students - many of whom will go on to be future leaders in global health in their own right. For example, I regularly: - Teach on Malnutrition on the Diploma in Tropical Medicine & Diploma in Tropical Nursing at LSHTM - Lead the organization of the "Nutrition in Emergencies" module - where there's a particuarly key opportunity to influence future leaders (as well as sharing details of the reserach I do in collaboration with various partners globally) - Discuss research-related issues with MSc students on the "Nutrition for Global Health MSc" - of which I am programme director - Discuss research-related issues with student and staff in the MARCH (Maternal, Adolescent, Reproductive and Child Health) Centre - of which I am co-lead for the C(Child) theme - this includes regular seminars and other meetings. MARCH newletters and other media also help disseminate key reserach findings and papers. All these are ongoing - I arrived at LSHTM in Sept 2014 and contibue to build and consolidate teaching/training at the university.
URL https://www.lshtm.ac.uk/aboutus/people/kerac.marko
 
Description CHild malnutrition & Adult NCD: Generating Evidence on mechanistic links to inform future policy/practice (CHANGE project)
Amount £2,083,590 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/V000802/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2021 
End 10/2024
 
Description Child malnutrition& Adult NCDs-Generating Evidence on mechanistic links in Jamaica, Malawi & Ethiopia to inform future policy/practice (CHANGE study)
Amount £49,819 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/T008628/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2019 
End 01/2020
 
Description GCRF Mechanistic Nutrition Links (LMICs) Jan 2020
Amount £1,994,948 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/V000802/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 03/2020 
End 09/2023
 
Description MRC GCRF (top up grant - via LSHTM, to supplement and enable new outputs from CHANGE project: enhanced lab outputs project for Malawi ChroSAM cohort)
Amount £25,600 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 01/2023 
End 03/2023
 
Description MRC GCRF (top up grant - via LSHTM, to supplement and enable new outputs from CHANGE project: quasi-RCT analaysis project)
Amount £83,333 (GBP)
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2022 
End 03/2023
 
Title A methodology to assess the risk of future non-communicable disease in children treated for severe malnourishment: analysis of a quasi-experimental trial 
Description Supported by a top-up grant to our MRC/GCRF CHANGE project, we developed a novel method to assess possible long-term impact of different quantity of nutrition rations. We have presented this at two meetings: - Nutrition & Growth, London, UK March 2023 - European Federation of Nutrition Societies, Belgrade, Serbia, Nov 2023 We are currently working on a manuscript for a peer-review paper. THis will make the tool more widely available to others 
Type Of Material Physiological assessment or outcome measure 
Year Produced 2024 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Too early for this - will report on this next year. 
 
Title CHANGE Cohort 1: Long-term Implications Of Nutrition (LION) dataset 
Description LION is an existing prospective cohort of survivors of severe malnutrition in Jamaica which has been followed-up post-discharge after been identified as severely malnourished and treated with specialised feeds. The cohort consist of malnourished children treated in inpatient care (1965-93). Included in the study are children with severe wasting (weight-for-age < 60%) or oedematous malnutrition (weight-for-age 60-80%, plus oedema). NCHS reference. The data comes from a cross-sectional retrospective survey on non-communicable disease (NCD) risk in adult survivors of severe malnutrition in childhood carried out between 2008-2012 at the Tropical Metabolism Research Unit (TMRU), the University of the West Indies (UWI), Jamaica. Adult data include blood pressure, anthropometric measures, body composition data, laboratory test results, and self-reported data relating to medical history, drug history and socioeconomic status. Childhood data include birth weight, and weight, length (height) and mid upper arm circumference (MUAC) measurements taken on admission, during hospitalization and up to 2 years post discharge from hospital. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This has recently been posted and forms the background to one of our CHANGE project analyses 
URL https://datacompass.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/2656
 
Title CHANGE Cohort 2: Chronic disease outcomes after Severe Acute Malnutrition (ChroSAM). Malawi 
Description A dataset containing information collected from a prospective cohort of children originally admitted for treatment of severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in Blantyre, Malawi during 2006 and 2007. It includes health and anthropometric data from admission to care, during treatment, at discharge, at 1 year post-discharge, and at 7-years post-discharge. During original admission to care, data was collected as part of a randomised controlled trial into the effects of pre- and probiotics on treatment recovery - findings were null (trial registry number ISRCTN19364765). At the most recent follow-up in 2013/14, data pertaining to NCD risk were also collected, and data on 1 sibling control and 1 community control (age and sex matched) was also added. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This has just recently been posted and will form the basis of our CHANGE project analysis 
URL https://datacompass.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/2657
 
Title CHANGE Cohort 3: Assessment of Long-Term Health Consequences of Acute Malnutrition (ACAM). Ethiopia 
Description ACAM is an existing prospective cohort of wasting treatment survivors in Ethiopia which has been followed-up post-discharge after been identified as severely malnourished and treated with therapeutic food. Population cohort includes malnourished children treated in outpatient care in 2014-15. Included in the study are children with WLZ 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This has just recently been posted and will form the basis of our CHANGE project analysis 
URL https://datacompass.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/2658
 
Title CHANGE Project (CHild malnutrition & Adult NCD: Generating Evidence on mechanistic links to inform future policy/practice) - main project page 
Description This is the main page for our CHANGE project describing overall aims and objectives. As papers come out they will be linked to this. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact We are still in process of gathering data but outputs will emerge over the coming years. Already the topic of weight gain after severe malnutrition has been discussed at a WHO Guideline meeting since evidence in this area is lacking: we anticipate that our project will help contribute important evidence to future disucssions/international/national guidelines. 2024 - further outputs will be added and linked to this project page. 
URL https://datacompass.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/2655/
 
Description 2012-2014 Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome ChroSAM project (+support for MAMI project) + new MLW PhD 2020-2023 
Organisation Wellcome Trust
Department Malawi-Liverpool Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme
Country Malawi 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The ChoSAM project is based on a cohort of children recruited for my PhD study in Malawi from 2006 to March 2007. I drafted the initial concept paper underlying this proposal and am overall lead researcher on this project, supervising UCL PhD student Natasha Lelijveld, who is working on the project as her PhD (I am one of 3 supervisors and the main supervisor in the field)
Collaborator Contribution MLW hosts the ChroSAM project in Malawi. The project is funded as an £197000 extension award to MLW core grant from the Wellcome trust. This pays all project and staff costs (my salary is covered separately by my ACL funding) MLW also supported my ACL Starter Grant looking at infant malnutrition: the communications team were key partners enabling and co-authoring the qualitative parts of this project, providing both ideas and intellectual inputs as well as the critical links to community groups who were interviewed.
Impact ChroSAM project started recruiting patients in Aug 2013 - mainly internal progress reports presented so far. One abstract accepted at IAEA meeting, May 2014 (please see publications) Will be further publications/outputs late 2014. MAMI has also resulted in several poster and oral presentations to date - a paper is being planned. This project is highly multidisciplinary, involving me as project leader/PI (Public Health/Clinical background); MSc students (hence also playing a role in training future researchers); social scientists from the MLW communications team. Project has now finished - but collaboration continues. We have just sumbitted the main paper arising from this study and it is in peer review. 2017 update: The main paper from the ChroSAM study has now been published and the first (of what we hope will be numerous) secondary papers accepted. For now, this project will be closed - though I hope there will be future papers arising from the dataset and future grant applications based on the same cohort as they get older. 2020 update: As well as some further MSc project and papers arising from the ChroSAM cohort we have recently established a link with a MLW PhD researcher who will undertake further follow-up of the cohort. This is due to start in Sept 2020 and is in planning phase now. The follow-up is also linked to the CHANGE study and would be a study site for the big project if awarded. 2024 update - We recently finished co-supervising a Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome trust PhD focusing on a cohort of children originally treated for malnutrition in Malawi in 2006/7 (I originally recruited these into an RCT for my PhD). This is part of the CHANGE project and we are still collaborating on that (the project has been extended until Oct 2024)
Start Year 2012
 
Description 2012-2014 Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome ChroSAM project (+support for MAMI project) + new MLW PhD 2020-2023 
Organisation Wellcome Trust
Department Malawi-Liverpool Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Programme
Country Malawi 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution The ChoSAM project is based on a cohort of children recruited for my PhD study in Malawi from 2006 to March 2007. I drafted the initial concept paper underlying this proposal and am overall lead researcher on this project, supervising UCL PhD student Natasha Lelijveld, who is working on the project as her PhD (I am one of 3 supervisors and the main supervisor in the field)
Collaborator Contribution MLW hosts the ChroSAM project in Malawi. The project is funded as an £197000 extension award to MLW core grant from the Wellcome trust. This pays all project and staff costs (my salary is covered separately by my ACL funding) MLW also supported my ACL Starter Grant looking at infant malnutrition: the communications team were key partners enabling and co-authoring the qualitative parts of this project, providing both ideas and intellectual inputs as well as the critical links to community groups who were interviewed.
Impact ChroSAM project started recruiting patients in Aug 2013 - mainly internal progress reports presented so far. One abstract accepted at IAEA meeting, May 2014 (please see publications) Will be further publications/outputs late 2014. MAMI has also resulted in several poster and oral presentations to date - a paper is being planned. This project is highly multidisciplinary, involving me as project leader/PI (Public Health/Clinical background); MSc students (hence also playing a role in training future researchers); social scientists from the MLW communications team. Project has now finished - but collaboration continues. We have just sumbitted the main paper arising from this study and it is in peer review. 2017 update: The main paper from the ChroSAM study has now been published and the first (of what we hope will be numerous) secondary papers accepted. For now, this project will be closed - though I hope there will be future papers arising from the dataset and future grant applications based on the same cohort as they get older. 2020 update: As well as some further MSc project and papers arising from the ChroSAM cohort we have recently established a link with a MLW PhD researcher who will undertake further follow-up of the cohort. This is due to start in Sept 2020 and is in planning phase now. The follow-up is also linked to the CHANGE study and would be a study site for the big project if awarded. 2024 update - We recently finished co-supervising a Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome trust PhD focusing on a cohort of children originally treated for malnutrition in Malawi in 2006/7 (I originally recruited these into an RCT for my PhD). This is part of the CHANGE project and we are still collaborating on that (the project has been extended until Oct 2024)
Start Year 2012
 
Description College of Medicine Malawi - Nutrition Projects 
Organisation University of Malawi
Department Department of Paediatrics & Child Health
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I have a long standing relationship with CoM Malawi, since originally working there as a volunteer paediatric registrar/lecturer in 2003-4. The link has both inspired and directly enabled my research career, hosting my PhD in 2005-8 and hosting subsequent links and projects ever since. Since the start of ACF/ACL posts I have maintained close links and have had several UCL MSc students visit Malawi to work on their projects there - all themed around my overall area of research into severe acute malnutrition / infant nutrition. We are currently collaborating on my AMS Clinical Lecturer Starter Grant - COM colleagues are co-authors on work presented at meetings to date and will be co-authors on the future papers arising.
Collaborator Contribution The CoM (Department of Paediatrics in particular) have hosted my UCL MSc students and facilitated access to patients / staff for the the project. Without this the projects would not have been possible. They have also helped with room hire for the community dissemination event which I organized as a key output of my AMS starter grant.
Impact Please see publications list: - Lelijveld et al - Ahmad et al. Other papers are in-progress (two are directly arising from the AMS starter grant: 1) Carers' and health workers' perspectives on Community Management of Acute Malnutrition (CMAM) in infants of less then 6 months: qualitative founding of a formative study from Malawi. (awaiting comments from co-authors; to be submitted to BMC Nutrition Journal) 2) Management of Acute Malnutrition in Infants aged <6 months (MAMI) in Malawi: prevalence and risk factors in an observational study (accepted for presentation at Royal College of Paediatrics Annual Meeting, April 2015. Will be submitted to peer review journal immediately after that) All the above pieces of work are already informing future research discussion / policy-discussions (e.g. in the ENN collaboration to develop assessment / patient management 'tools' for infants <6m). Hence there are already early impacts on policy/health services. 2016 update: This collaboration continues. CoM I hope will be involved in the adolescent study for which I have just been awarded a grant. We also continue collaborating on student projects. 2017 update I remain in contact with colleages at CoM. We are joint investigators on an application to look at body composition in our cohort of ex-malnourished children in Blantyre, Malawi - this is hoped to start later in 2017 (funding allowing) 2019 update - This past year I have not been out to Malawi but did have a MSc student visit over summer 2018 to work on a project looking at nutritional status of surgical patients. 2020 update - another MSc student did her MSc project on Malawi data which we hope to publish together. COM colleagues were also co-applicants on a MRC application (the full version of the CHANGE study). This is a good example of long term outcomes arising from a long established contact. 2024 update - We recently finished co-supervising a Malawi-Liverpool-Wellcome trust PhD focusing on a cohort of children originally treated for malnutrition in Malawi in 2006/7 (I originally recruited these into an RCT for my PhD). This is part of the CHANGE project and we are still collaborating on that (the project has been extended until Oct 2024)
 
Description Jimma University MAMI Project (funded) & Post-malnutrition follow-up project (seeking funding) 
Organisation University of Jimma
Country Ethiopia 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution I am PI on the $2.5m Eleanor-Crook Foundation funded project on infant malnutrition. It is the culmination and major step forward for the infant nutriton work I've been doing for many years now. Related to but separate from the above project, Jimma are also partners on the MRC CHANGE study. We submitted the main application in Jan 2020 and are awaiting outcomes from a MARCH 2020 panel meeting.
Collaborator Contribution Colleagues at Jimma are leading the research locally in Ethiopia where our study is set.
Impact We have just started the project in Aug 2019 so are in year 1 developing formative work to inform our main RCT planned to start Oct 2020. March 2021 update: - We have completed MAMI project formative work though our main RCT plans have been delayed for a year due to COVID. - We were awared the follow-on larger grant and look forward to continued collaboration on the CHANGE project in 2021/22 (though an overall 3 year project we only have year 1 funding to begin with and need to meet project milestones in order to progress to full 32 month project) March2023 - collaboration still active. Publications and other outputs still in progress March 2024 update: - Following a 1 year no-cost extension to the CHANGE project, this collaboration is still active and working towards project aim/objectives.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Partnership with Cambridge University on CHANGE Project Child malnutrition & Adult NCDs: Generating new Evidence on mechanistic links to inform future policy and practice (CHANGE project) 
Organisation University of Cambridge
Department Institute of Metabolic Science (IMS)
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Following a seed award in Sept 2019 - Jan 2020 we successfully applied for a 32 month MRC project to explore long term outcomes post severe malnutrition in more detail. We have to deliver on year 1 milestones for the project to proceed - these focus on profiling the cohorts and ensuring detailed plans for follow-up work. I am PI on the project and led both the writing of the seed award and also the main award.
Collaborator Contribution Cambridge (Dr Albert Koulman - Wellcome-MRC Institute of Metabolic Science) are our key lab partner in the CHANGE project and will lead on lipidomic work
Impact The main project is due to start this month, March 2021. Overall aims and objective are as below: THE AIM: To optimise severe malnutrition treatment programmes by better understanding the mechanisms linking infant/child undernutrition to longer-term (adult) NCD OBJECTIVES: 1. To understand how post-malnutrition weight gain (PMWG) affects risks of cardiometabolic NCD a. How does the timing of an episode of malnutrition influence this risk? b. How does severity of malnutrition influence this risk? c. How do different patient management approaches influence this risk? 2. To develop biomarkers for predicting NCD risk in survivors of child malnutrition by: a. Describing the biochemical characteristics of malnutrition survivors, differentiating those with/without NCD. b. Describing the biochemical profiles of different patterns of PMWG c. Identifying biomarkers common to different patterns of PMWG and NCD risk in survivors March2023 - collaboration still active. Publications and other outputs still in progress March 2024 update: - Following a 1 year no-cost extension to the CHANGE project, this collaboration is still active and working towards project aim/objectives.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Partnership with MEIRU (Malawi Epidemiology & Intervention Research Unit) - CHANGE Project Child malnutrition & Adult NCDs: Generating new Evidence on mechanistic links to inform future policy and practice (CHANGE project) 
Organisation Malawi Epidemiology & Intervention Research Unit
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Learned Society 
PI Contribution Following a seed award in Sept 2019 - Jan 2020 we successfully applied for a 32 month MRC project to explore long term outcomes post severe malnutrition in more detail. We have to deliver on year 1 milestones for the project to proceed - these focus on profiling the cohorts and ensuring detailed plans for follow-up work. I am PI on the project and led both the writing of the seed award and also the main award.
Collaborator Contribution MEIRU are one of our 3 key partners and will collect data from two cohorts: - A cohort of children from 2003-4 (the "MEIRU 1000" cohort) who were small/undernourished then and who we will follow-up now in their teens to look for early signs of NCD - A birth cohort
Impact The main project is due to start this month, March 2021. Overall aims and objective are as below: THE AIM: To optimise severe malnutrition treatment programmes by better understanding the mechanisms linking infant/child undernutrition to longer-term (adult) NCD OBJECTIVES: 1. To understand how post-malnutrition weight gain (PMWG) affects risks of cardiometabolic NCD a. How does the timing of an episode of malnutrition influence this risk? b. How does severity of malnutrition influence this risk? c. How do different patient management approaches influence this risk? 2. To develop biomarkers for predicting NCD risk in survivors of child malnutrition by: a. Describing the biochemical characteristics of malnutrition survivors, differentiating those with/without NCD. b. Describing the biochemical profiles of different patterns of PMWG c. Identifying biomarkers common to different patterns of PMWG and NCD risk in survivors March2023 - collaboration still active. Publications and other outputs still in progress March 2024 update: - Following a 1 year no-cost extension to the CHANGE project, this collaboration is still active and working towards project aim/objectives.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Partnership with Southampton University - CHANGE Project Child malnutrition & Adult NCDs: Generating new Evidence on mechanistic links to inform future policy and practice (CHANGE project) 
Organisation University of Southampton
Department Human development and health
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Following a seed award in Sept 2019 - Jan 2020 we successfully applied for a 32 month MRC project to explore long term outcomes post severe malnutrition in more detail. We have to deliver on year 1 milestones for the project to proceed - these focus on profiling the cohorts and ensuring detailed plans for follow-up work. I am PI on the project and led both the writing of the seed award and also the main award.
Collaborator Contribution Southampton (Prof Jon Swan) are our key lab partner and will lead on metabolomic aspects of this work
Impact The main project is due to start this month, March 2021. Overall aims and objective are as below: THE AIM: To optimise severe malnutrition treatment programmes by better understanding the mechanisms linking infant/child undernutrition to longer-term (adult) NCD OBJECTIVES: 1. To understand how post-malnutrition weight gain (PMWG) affects risks of cardiometabolic NCD a. How does the timing of an episode of malnutrition influence this risk? b. How does severity of malnutrition influence this risk? c. How do different patient management approaches influence this risk? 2. To develop biomarkers for predicting NCD risk in survivors of child malnutrition by: a. Describing the biochemical characteristics of malnutrition survivors, differentiating those with/without NCD. b. Describing the biochemical profiles of different patterns of PMWG c. Identifying biomarkers common to different patterns of PMWG and NCD risk in survivors March2023 - collaboration still active. Publications and other outputs still in progress March 2024 update: - Following a 1 year no-cost extension to the CHANGE project, this collaboration is still active and working towards project aim/objectives.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Partnership with UWI Tropical Metabolism Research Unit (TMRU) on application to study links between child malnutrition and adult NCD 
Organisation University of West Indies
Department Tropical Metabolism Research Institute
Country Jamaica 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Together with TMRU, Jimma University and MEIRU Malawi we applied to and obtained seed funding to develop a project to explore links between early child malnutrition and later life NCD. I am PI on the project and had a research assistant lead on a background systematic review / contribute to grant-writing.
Collaborator Contribution TMRU colleauges made key scientific contributions to multiple aspects of this project: - The original concept - Co-authors on the systematic review - Co-authors of the full grant application - Hosted a research planning meeting in Jamaica in November
Impact We submitted a full application to MRC in Jan 2020 and are awaiting results. Irrespective of what happens with that we hope that the collaboration can continue. March 2021 update: - We were awared the follow-on larger grant and look forward to continued collaboration on the CHANGE project in 2021/22 (though an overall 3 year project we only have year 1 funding to begin with and need to meet project milestones in order to progress to full 32 month project) March2023 - collaboration still active. Publications and other outputs still in progress March 2024 update: - Following a 1 year no-cost extension to the CHANGE project, this collaboration is still active and working towards project aim/objectives.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Swiss School of Public Health / University of Lausanne - China famine study 
Organisation Swiss School of Public Health
Country Switzerland 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Following a PhD student event at which I was external speaker, I was invited to join the author group on a paper describing non-communicable disease outcomes. This was recently published. and contributes to our overall CHANGE project theme of work looking at child malnutrition/adult NCD links
Collaborator Contribution Our partners here led the analysis and writing on the main paper. I inputted as a co-author. More recently, we discussed the possibility of a follow-on paper - this will potentially happen later in 2024.
Impact We have together published one paper and one editorial 1) Exposure to the 1959-1961 Chinese famine and risk of non-communicable diseases in later life: A life course perspective. Cheng M, Sommet N, Kerac M, Jopp DS, Spini D. PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023 Aug 16;3(8):e0002161. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0002161. eCollection 2023. PMID: 37585364 2) Long-term and intergenerational impacts of famine: why preventing and treating child malnutrition must be seen as an investment and not a cost. Kerac M, Cheng M. Am J Clin Nutr. 2024 Feb;119(2):239-240. doi: 10.1016/j.ajcnut.2023.12.001. Epub 2023 Dec 29. PMID: 38309820 Both these feed into societal/policy/public services impact regarding highlighting the importance of long-term sequelae of severe malnutrition.
Start Year 2022
 
Description ACF (Action Contre la Faim) Research for Nutrition conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The International Scientific Research for Nutrition Conference #R4NUT, organised by Action Contre la Faim, is a major meeting place to bring to light the latest research findings and topics related to undernutrition. It brings together internationally renowned field experts and researchers for a two-day exchange of knowledge and critical perspectives on the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of undernutrition. Based on field experiences, research projects, strategic guidelines or nutrition & health policies and programs, all the evidence generated is discussed during the conference. It will contribute to strengthening the knowledge and capacity of professionals involved in the fight against undernutrition. Action Contre la Faim recognizes the importance of harnessing local solutions in the fight against nutritional insecurity. It encourages operational, participatory, accountable, innovative and transformative research.

At this meeting I was part of a session focusing on long term outcomes from severe malnutrition and with two junior colleagues presented on our CHANGE project work. This led to a good discussion and again focused people's attention on this often neglected part of malnutrition care. We hope that this information and change of focus will in future lead to more programmes/policies focusing on these long-term risks.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://research-for-nutrition-conference.org/
 
Description ANH (Agriculture, Nutrition & Health) Academy, Malawi, 2023 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The ANH Academy Week is a series of annual events that bring together the community of researchers, practitioners and policymakers working at the intersection of agriculture, food systems, nutrition, and health. The objective of the ANH Academy Week is to foster knowledge exchange, innovation and learning around interdisciplinary ANH research.
The ANH Academy Week format may consist of one or two of these interlinked components:
Learning Labs - a series of training workshops in interdisciplinary skills and knowledge for agriculture, nutrition and health research and practice; (explore all previous labs here)
Research Conference - an abstract-driven symposium featuring oral presentations, poster sessions and keynote speeches, as well as plenary round tables, side events and working group discussions.

At this 2023 ANH academy work I co-led a "learning lab" on severe malnutrtion and shared details and latest results from the MRC CHANGE project. This helped focus audience attention (and hopefully future programme/policy directions) on the importance of considering not just short-term outcomes from malnutrition but long-term outcomes too.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.anh-academy.org/academy-week/2023
 
Description New Scientist interview - Starvation-resistant cave fish 
Form Of Engagement Activity A magazine, newsletter or online publication
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact In March 2024 I was interviewed by a New Scientist jounralist about an article they were publishing on starvation-resistant cave fish (which authors were arguing might lead to improved future treatments for malnutrition)
I took the opportunity to share wider information about severe malnutrition globally and also highlighted MRC-GRCF CHANGE project work on longer-term outcomes following severe malnutrition.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2024
URL https://www.newscientist.com/article/2421466-blind-cave-fish-offers-lessons-in-how-to-survive-starva...
 
Description Rank Prize meeting on Severe Undernutrition 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact I was invited as a guest speaker to a RANK PRIZE symposium organized by Imperial College London.
This was a meeting of about ~20 professionals and policy makers working in severe malnutrition.
THe meetings are usually reported on the RANK website.
DIscussions were had about possible future links and collaborations after sharing of ideas at the meeting.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://www.rankprize.org/symposia/
 
Description STRONGER foundation talk 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Supporters
Results and Impact I was invited speaker to a STRONGER Foundations talk, speaking to core team and other funders who are part of coalition about my research and it's impact / what it might mean for future funding efforts.
Though too early to say I planned this talk to influence future funding efforts and approach to work by funders (including reflection on why longer term investments are so important)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022
URL https://stronger-foundations.org/
 
Description Teaching on LSHTM courses: Diploma in Tropical Medicine; Diploma in Tropical Nursing; Nutrition in Emergencies Module 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact I regularly teach on severe malnutrition on the above three courses at LSHTM. All talks are informed by / include descriptions of research I'm also engaged with and a key aim (from my perspective) is to broaden awareness of the research - and in turn to imporve policy/practice in the field of severe malnutrition. THis happen because:
- Some students go directly to research in this area (e.g. via summer project with myself; via projects with others)
- Many of our students will go onto be leading policy-makers/practitioners in their own right.
All the above begins with change in views/knowledge - as evidenced by positive feedback I get.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019,2020,2021,2022,2023