Multivitamin supplementation in HIV-positive pregnant women: impact on depression and quality of life in a resource-poor setting

M C Smith Fawzi, S F Kaaya, J Mbwambo, G I Msamanga, G Antelman, R Wei, D J Hunter, W W Fawzi, M C Smith Fawzi, S F Kaaya, J Mbwambo, G I Msamanga, G Antelman, R Wei, D J Hunter, W W Fawzi

Abstract

Objectives: The primary objective of this study was to examine the effect of vitamin supplementation on health-related quality of life and the risk of elevated depressive symptoms comparable to major depressive disorder (MDD) in HIV-positive pregnant women in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.

Methods: From April 1995 to July 1997, 1078 HIV-positive pregnant women were enrolled in a randomized controlled trial. We examined the effects of vitamin supplementation on quality of life and the risk of elevated depressive symptoms, assessed longitudinally every 6-12 months.

Results: A substantial prevalence of elevated depressive symptoms (42%) was observed in HIV-positive pregnant women. Multivitamin supplementation (B-complex, C and E) demonstrated a protective effect on depression [relative risk (RR)=0.78; P=0.005] and quality of life [RR=0.72 for social functioning (P=0.001) and vitality (P=0.0001); RR=0.70 for role-physical (P=0.002)]; however, vitamin A showed no effect on these outcomes.

Conclusions: Multivitamin supplementation (B-complex, C and E) resulted in a reduction in risk of elevated depressive symptoms comparable to MDD and improvement in quality of life in HIV-positive pregnant women in Tanzania.

Figures

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Fig. 1
Potential mechanisms for the effect of multivitamin supplementation on depressive symptoms and health-related quality of life.

Source: PubMed

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