| Literature DB >> 25170469 |
Alaa Badawi1, Paul Arora2, Eman Sadoun3, Al-Anoud Al-Thani4, Mohamed H Al Thani4.
Abstract
Qatar has a high burden of chronic diseases including obesity, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Low serum vitamin D levels have been implicated in the development and progression of a range of these chronic conditions. The prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency or deficiency in the general population of Qatar has still not been investigated. The aim of this study was to carry out a systematic review of published studies documenting the prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency or deficiency in the Qatari population. A search strategy was developed for online databases (PubMed, Ovid MEDLINE, Embase and Embase Classic) between 1980 to the last week of August 2012, and bibliographies of the included studies were further searched for additional reports. Search terms used were QATAR and VITAMIN D. Studies reporting the serum levels of vitamin D in several Qatari sub-populations were identified. Weighted-average vitamin D serum levels and prevalence of low vitamin D status (<75 nmol/L) were calculated. Subgroup analysis was carried out by age. The quality of each study was evaluated according to four criteria: national representativeness, representation of males and females, the sample size, and the sampling protocol. A total of 16 relevant publications were identified, and 8 of these (reporting from 7 unique studies) met our inclusion and exclusion criteria with a total number of 1,699 Qatari subjects. The pooled sample size weighted-average vitamin D concentration (±SD) was 45.3±14.3 nmol/L (95% CI: 44.6-46.0; range 29.2-66.9 nmol/L). The weighted-average prevalence of low vitamin D status was 90.4% (95% CI: 90.1-91.0; range 83%-91%). Age was inversely correlated with vitamin D levels and directly with its insufficiency/deficiency prevalence. There have only been a few studies on the prevalence of low vitamin D in Qatar a very high prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency/deficiency in Qatar that increases with age has been suggested. The present report underlines the need to develop a nationally representative study to further evaluate vitamin D status in Qatar. Given the growing evidence of the role of vitamin D in chronic disease, this study could help develop public health strategies for disease prevention in Qatar.Entities:
Keywords: Qatar; prevalence; prevention; public health; systematic review; vitamin D
Year: 2012 PMID: 25170469 PMCID: PMC4140375 DOI: 10.4081/jphr.2012.e36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health Res ISSN: 2279-9028
Figure 1.Systematic literature review process. The flow diagram describes the systematic review of literature on vitamin D status in Qatar. The selected 8 reports represent 7 unique studies.
Characteristics of the selected studies and study populations.
| Study | Study population | Study design | Duration of recruitment | n | Average age (years±SD) | M:F (%) | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bener | Children | Case-control | Aug-Dec 2007 | 170 | 9.9±4.2 | 47:53 | 2 |
| Bener | Children | Case-control | Oct 2009-July 2010 | 464 | 8.01±4.6 | 55:45 | 3 |
| Mahdy | Health care professionals | Cross-sectional | Jan 2007-Jan 2008 | 340 | 37.9 | 40:60 | 2 |
| El-Menyar | Hospital record | Retrospective | Jan 2008-Nov 2009 | 498 | 49±13 | 44:56 | 3 |
| Hamilton | Sportsmen | Cross-sectional | April-Oct 2008 | 92 | 21.3±6.9 | 100:0 | 1 |
| Shrief and Rizk[ | College girls | Cross-sectional | Spring-fall 2010 | 71 | 23 | 0:100 | 1 |
| Racinais | School girls | Cross-sectional | NS | 64 | 11.7±1.5 | 0:100 | 0 |
*Values represent mean±standard deviation (SD).
°Quality score was calculated as described in Materials and Methods.
#The same study reported in two publications, with additional information in the more recent report.
§SD was not mentioned in the original report.
^Median age as calculated from the reported age range. NS, not stated in the original report.
Average vitamin D serum levels and deficiency/insufficiency in the Qatari population at different age groups.
| Age group | Study | Study | Average serum vitamin D levels | Prevalence of vitamin D <75nmol/L | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Years | n | n | (nmol/L) | (%) | |
| <16 | 698 | Bener | 170 | 46.2±23.0 | 85 |
| Bener | 464 | 66.9±24.7 | 83 | ||
| Racinais | 64 | NS | 100 | ||
| Weighted average | (60.6-62.2) | (85.9-86.4) | |||
| 61.4±10.0 | 86.2±2.4 | ||||
| 16-30 | 163 | Hamilton | 92 | NS | 100 |
| Shrief and Rizk[ | 71 | NS | 97 | ||
| Weighted average | 93.9±5.3 | ||||
| (93.5-94.3) | |||||
| >30 | 838 | Mahdy | 340 | 29.2 | 97 |
| El-Menyar | 498 | 35.9±27.5 | 91 | ||
| Weighted average | 33.2±3.4 | 93.4±3.1 | |||
| (31.9-32.5) | (93.1-93.6) | ||||
| O verall | 1699 | Weighted overall average | 45.3±14.3 | 90.4±7.2 | |
| (44.6-46.0) | (90.1-90.8) | ||||
*Stratifying vitamin D level by age was carried out from the average age of the study population (Table 1). Stratifying vitamin D level by gender from the selected reports was not possible given the way in which the data were in the original studies.
°Overall represents the entire age range from <16 to >30 years.
#The same study reported in two publications, with additional information in the more recent report.
§Data represent weighted average±standard deviation (SD). Numbers in parentheses are 95% confidence intervals (CI) for weighted average.
^Data in three of the selected studies (ref. ns. 38-40) did not allow this value to be generated.
$Calculated from 1472 subjects extracted from 4 of the selected studies in which the relevant information was available (ref. ns. 37, 41-44).
**Calculated from the 7 selected studies (n=1699). NS, values not stated in the original report.
Prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency/deficiency in some Arab and Western countries and in Qatar.
| Country | Study group | Prevalence of low vitamin D (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Qatar | Population (this study) | 90 |
| Jordan | Adult females | 37 |
| Morocco | Adult females | 91 |
| Lebanon | Adolescent females | 32 |
| Adolescent males | 12 | |
| Saudi Arabia | Adolescent females | 80 |
| Tunisia | Adult females | 48 |
| USA | Population | 31 |
| Canada | Population | 70 |
Data were extracted from the findings of the present study (for Qatar) and from the literature.[2,3,48,53,54]