Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA.
Department of Nutrition and Food Science, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, USA.
Eur J Clin Nutr. 2019 Mar;73(3):424-431. doi: 10.1038/s41430-018-0212-0. Epub 2018 Jun 12.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: Vitamin D status has been associated with fetal growth and offspring's bone mass in some observational studies. We characterize the trajectory of total maternal serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentration by race and examine whether vitamin D status is associated with neonatal anthropometry and body composition as assessed by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA).
SUBJECTS/METHODS: Three longitudinal pregnancy samples from the Memphis site of the Calcium for Preeclampsia Prevention trial (1992-1995) were used. Racial differences in total 25(OH)D trajectories (n = 343 women) were tested using an interaction term between blood draw gestational week and race in linear mixed-effects models. Linear regression and linear mixed-effects models estimated the adjusted associations between total 25(OH)D concentration with neonatal anthropometry and body composition (n = 252 with DXA) including interactions with infant sex and serum calcium.
Total 25(OH)D concentration increased with gestational age, but its trajectory over pregnancy did not differ between African-American and Caucasian women. Deficient maternal vitamin D (25(OH)D concentration <20 ng/ml) was associated with lower neonatal total bone mineral density (β -0.009 g/cm; 95% CI -0.016, -0.002). Among male newborns, deficiency was also associated with lower lean mass (-217 g; -391, -43) and birthweight (-308 g; -540, -76). Deficient maternal vitamin D was also associated with lower ponderal index (β -2.3 kg/m; 95% CI -4.0, -0.5) among those in the lowest calcium tertile.
Vitamin D deficiency during pregnancy is associated with lower bone density and smaller size at birth in certain subgroups suggesting its importance in fetal development.
背景/目的:一些观察性研究表明,维生素 D 状况与胎儿生长和后代骨量有关。我们通过种族描述了母体血清 25-羟维生素 D [25(OH)D]总浓度的轨迹,并研究了维生素 D 状况是否与通过双能 X 射线吸收法 (DXA)评估的新生儿人体测量和身体成分有关。
受试者/方法:使用钙预防子痫前期试验 (1992-1995 年) 孟菲斯站点的三个纵向妊娠样本。在线性混合效应模型中,通过血液采集妊娠周和种族之间的交互项检验总 25(OH)D 轨迹的种族差异(n=343 名女性)。线性回归和线性混合效应模型估计了总 25(OH)D 浓度与新生儿人体测量和身体成分(n=252 人进行了 DXA)之间的调整关联,包括与婴儿性别和血清钙的相互作用。
总 25(OH)D 浓度随孕龄增加而增加,但非裔美国人和白种人女性的妊娠期间轨迹没有差异。母体维生素 D 缺乏(25(OH)D 浓度<20ng/ml)与新生儿总骨矿物质密度较低有关(β-0.009g/cm;95%CI-0.016,-0.002)。在男婴中,缺乏症也与较低的瘦体重(-217g;-391,-43)和出生体重(-308g;-540,-76)有关。在血清钙最低三分位的人群中,母体维生素 D 缺乏症也与较低的体质量指数(β-2.3kg/m;95%CI-4.0,-0.5)有关。
妊娠期间维生素 D 缺乏与某些亚组的骨密度降低和出生时体型较小有关,这表明其在胎儿发育中的重要性。