| Literature DB >> 28738090 |
Sharon L McDonnell1, Keith A Baggerly2, Carole A Baggerly1, Jennifer L Aliano1, Christine B French1, Leo L Baggerly1, Myla D Ebeling3, Charles S Rittenberg3, Christopher G Goodier3, Julio F Mateus Niño3, Rebecca J Wineland3, Roger B Newman3, Bruce W Hollis3, Carol L Wagner3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Given the high rate of preterm birth (PTB) nationwide and data from RCTs demonstrating risk reduction with vitamin D supplementation, the Medical University of South Carolina (MUSC) implemented a new standard of care for pregnant women to receive vitamin D testing and supplementation.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28738090 PMCID: PMC5524288 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0180483
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Maternal sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of cohort.
| Characteristic | MUSC Cohort |
|---|---|
| (N = 1,064) | |
| White | 488 (46%) |
| African American | 395 (37%) |
| Hispanic | 117 (11%) |
| Asian/PI | 19 (2%) |
| Multiple/Other | 39 (4%) |
| 29 (18–45) | |
| 1 (0–9) | |
| 2 (1–11) | |
| 25 (12–66) | |
| Married | 530 (50%) |
| None/Medicaid | 519 (49%) |
| 13 (4–20) | |
| Yes | 140 (13%) |
| Preterm (<37 weeks) | 139 (13%) |
*6 women missing race/ethnicity data, 31 missing BMI data, and 91 missing education data.
Fig 1Maternal 25(OH)D concentration by gestational age (weeks) at birth.
Term birth is ≥37 weeks of gestation, late preterm birth is 34 to <37 weeks, moderately preterm is 32 to <34 weeks, and very preterm is <32 weeks. Solid gray circles and solid black line represent MUSC cohort (N = 1064) and open circles and dashed line represent Hollis and Wagner et al. trial cohort (N = 509).
Fig 2Zoom of the fitted LOESS curve of maternal 25(OH)D concentration and gestational age (weeks) at birth with 1 and 2 SD windows superimposed.
Black line represents fitted LOESS curve, dark gray area represents 1 standard deviation, and light gray area represents 2 standard deviations.
Association between maternal 25(OH)D concentration and the risk of preterm birth (N = 1064).
| Preterm Birth (<37 Weeks) | Term Birth (≥37 Weeks) | p-value (test for trend) | OR | SES Adjusted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (95% CI) | (95% CI) | ||||
| <20 ng/mL | 49 (20%) | 199 (80%) | 1.0 | 1.0 | |
| N (%) | |||||
| 20 to <30 ng/mL | 33 (12%) | 234 (88%) | 0.63 (0.37,1.04) | ||
| N (%) | |||||
| 30 to <40 ng/mL | 32 (13%) | 223 (87%) | |||
| N (%) | |||||
| ≥40 ng/mL | 25 (9%) | 269 (91%) | |||
| N (%) |
Bold values signify significance at p<0.05.
†Adjusted for insurance status and years of education (social economic status proxy variables).
Association between maternal 25(OH)D concentration and the risk of preterm birth by preterm birth subtype.
| Spontaneous Preterm Birth Rates | Spontaneous Preterm Birth: OR | Indicated Preterm Birth Rates | Indicated Preterm Birth: OR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (<37 Weeks) | (95% CI) | (<37 Weeks) | (95% CI) | |
| <20 ng/mL (N = 248) | 21 (8%) | 1.0 | 28 (11%) | 1.0 |
| N preterm (%) | ||||
| 20 to <30 ng/mL (N = 267) | 17 (6%) | 0.74 | 16 (6%) | |
| N preterm (%) | (0.38, 1.43) | |||
| 30 to <40 ng/mL (N = 255) | 16 (6%) | 0.72 | 16 (6%) | |
| N preterm (%) | (0.37, 1.42) | |||
| ≥40 ng/mL (N = 294) | 11 (4%) | 14 (5%) | ||
| N preterm (%) |
Bold values signify significance at p<0.05.
Fig 3Maternal 25(OH)D concentration by gestational age (weeks) at birth for women with a prior preterm birth.
Term birth is ≥37 weeks of gestation, late preterm birth is 34 to <37 weeks, moderately preterm is 32 to <34 weeks, and very preterm is <32 weeks. Black line represents fitted LOESS curve.
Fig 4Preterm birth rates among women with low initial 25(OH)D concentrations (<40 ng/mL at ≤20 weeks), comparing those with concentrations ≥40 ng/mL vs. those with concentrations <40 ng/mL on a follow-up test.