DSM Presents New Clinical Study with MixMe
Owaldo da Costa e Silva, Senior Director Nutrition Improvement Program says ‘These results will further help DSM to introduce cutting-edge solutions to improve micronutrient nutrition in certain parts of the globe. It could also be important in the global fight against nutritional anemia, as well as in the eradication of hidden hunger.’

2/01/2011 -- A new clinical study with MixMe offers hopes of improving the nutritional status of populations whose diet is severely limited. MixMe is a multi-micronutrient powder launched in early 2008 in cooperation with the World Food Programme.
Iron and zinc deficiency are among the most common nutrient deficiencies in the world, and pose an even greater threat to the health of women and children. In the past, attempts have been made to supplement affected populations with high doses of iron. This practice is now discouraged by the World Health Organisation (WHO). This follows findings which suggest that in regions of the world where malaria is endemic, untargeted iron supplementation may increase hospitalizations due to malaria in children. Moreover, untargeted iron supplementation in such regions may also increase the risk of bacteria from the intestine infecting the bloodstream – a co-infection common with malaria. This is due to the action of the excess iron which is not absorbed into the bloodstream.
The failure to absorb iron is in part attributable to the diet available to many of the world’s poorest populations, in which whole-grain cereals and legumes figure prominently. These foods contain a naturally occurring anti-nutrient called phytate, which binds minerals, including iron and zinc, and makes them unavailable for absorption by the human body.
Additionally to all the vitamins, the new MixMe provides low doses of a highly absorbable iron and zinc which makes the product suitable for people in malaria-infested areas. The new MixMe formulation used in the study contains a readily bioavailable form of iron (NaFeEDTA) plus an increased vitamin C dose along with a phytase which is active at stomach pH. Phytase is an enzyme that helps to release the digestible nutrients found in grains and oil seeds.
Rob Beudeker, Innovation Program Director, DSM Nutritional Products, comments: "Trösch et al have shown that MixMe offers iron in a highly bioavailable form. Even when a population’s staple diet is high in whole-grain cereals and legumes, essential levels of iron can be made available for digestion by this means.”
In the study, MixMe was used to fortify the traditional breakfast of maize porridge that is consumed by South African primary school children. After 23 weeks on fortified porridge, the children’s mean body iron store among the test group was doubled. The prevalence of iron and zinc deficiency was also strongly reduced.
Owaldo da Costa e Silva, Senior Director Nutrition Improvement Program:
‘These results will further help DSM to introduce cutting-edge solutions to improve micronutrient nutrition in certain parts of the globe. It could also be important in the global fight against nutritional anemia, as well as in the eradication of hidden hunger.’