Vitamin A status in a sample of pregnant and lactating women living in
several representative regions of Congo was assessed and compared
between August and September 2004. This survey was conducted using a
randomized two-stage cluster-sampling method with stratification on 90
clusters, each consisting of at least 15 women. Vitamin A status was
determined in a total of 1,054 individuals, using the impression
cytology with transfer (ICT) test, the modified relative dose response
test (MRDR test) on dried blood spots (DBS), and clinical examination
to detect signs of xerophthalmia. The clinical criterion defining
vitamin A deficiency was the presence of active xerophthalmia (Bitot's
spots [X1B]), active corneal disease), and/ or night blindness (XN
stage). The prevalence of clinical signs of stage XN and X1B
xerophthalmia in the Republic of Congo was found to be 16% and 19%
respectively. The prevalence of clinical signs (X1B) was greater in the
rural north than in urban areas, with a gradient running from urban
(5%) to rural area (33%); 27% of all the ICT tests showed that the
subjects were suffering from vitamin A deficiency. The deficiency rates
were significantly higher (p<0.001) in urban surroundings
(Brazzaville) than in the rural northern regions. The biochemical MRDR
test showed the presence of vitamin A deficiency (≥0.06) in 26%
of the mothers in Brazzaville compared to 6% in the town of Kouilou;
44% of the women had retinol levels of <10 µg/dL in the rural
north whereas these percentages were significantly lower in the urban
areas surveyed (chi-square=62.30, p<0.001). A significant
correlation was found to exist (p<0.001) between the ICT test and
the MRDR test on DBS. In the population as a whole, 30% of the mothers
suffering from malarial attack had abnormally low MRDR levels
(≥0.06) compared to no malaria. The results of the present study
confirm that vitamin A deficiency is a serious public-health issue in
pregnant and lactating mothers in the Republic of Congo