| Literature DB >> 29686863 |
Corrine Hanson1, Marina Verdi Schumacher1, Elizabeth Lyden2, Dejun Su2, Jeremy Furtado3, Rex Cammack4, Bradley Bereitschaft4, Matthew Van Ormer5, Howard Needelman5, Elizabeth McGinn5, Katherine Rilett5, Caleb Cave5, Rebecca Johnson5, Kara Weishaar5, Ann Anderson-Berry5.
Abstract
The objective of the present study was to evaluate intakes and serum levels of vitamin A, vitamin E, and related compounds in a cohort of maternal-infant pairs in the Midwestern USA in relation to measures of health disparities. Concentrations of carotenoids and tocopherols in maternal serum were measured using HPLC and measures of socio-economic status, including food security and food desert residence, were obtained in 180 mothers upon admission to a Midwestern Academic Medical Center labour and delivery unit. The Kruskal-Wallis and independent-samples t tests were used to compare measures between groups; logistic regression models were used to adjust for relevant confounders. P < 0·05 was considered statistically significant. The odds of vitamin A insufficiency/deficiency were 2·17 times higher for non-whites when compared with whites (95 % CI 1·16, 4·05; P = 0·01) after adjustment for relevant confounders. Similarly, the odds of being vitamin E deficient were 3·52 times higher for non-whites (95 % CI 1·51, 8·10; P = 0·003). Those with public health insurance had lower serum lutein concentrations compared with those with private health insurance (P = 0·05), and living in a food desert was associated with lower serum concentrations of β-carotene (P = 0·02), after adjustment for confounders. Subjects with low/marginal food security had higher serum levels of lutein and β-cryptoxanthin compared with those with high food security (P = 0·004 and 0·02 for lutein and β-cryptoxanthin). Diet quality may be a public health concern in economically disadvantaged populations of industrialised societies leading to nutritional disadvantages as well.Entities:
Keywords: Carotenoids; Food deserts; Food security; NHANES, Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; Poverty; USDA, United States Department of Agriculture; Vitamin A
Year: 2018 PMID: 29686863 PMCID: PMC5906555 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2018.5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Sample characteristics, serum concentrations, and dietary intakes
(Numbers, mean values and standard deviations, percentages, and medians and ranges)
| Maternal characteristic | Median | Range | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal age (years) | 180 | ||
| Mean | 28·7 | ||
| | 5·6 | ||
| Maternal BMI (kg/m2) | 112 | ||
| Mean | 27·1 | ||
| | 6·6 | ||
| Infant gestational age at birth (weeks) | 180 | ||
| Mean | 38·04 | ||
| | 3·1 | ||
| Maternal race (%) | |||
| White | 111 | 58·7 | |
| African-American | 28 | 14·8 | |
| Hispanic | 24 | 12·7 | |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 3 | 1·6 | |
| Other | 23 | 12·7 | |
| Smoking status (%) | |||
| Current smokers | 28 | 15 | |
| Former/never smokers | 148 | 85 | |
| Food security (%) | |||
| High | 136 | 76 | |
| Marginal | 17 | 9 | |
| Low | 19 | 11 | |
| Very low | 7 | 4 | |
| Food desert (%) | |||
| Yes | 19 | 11 | |
| No | 148 | 89 | |
| Health insurance payor status | |||
| Public | 103 | 57·5 | |
| Private | 76 | 42·5 | |
| Maternal serum levels (μg/l) | |||
| Retinol | 180 | 299·5 | 85·7–734·8 |
| β-Carotene | 180 | 138·2 | 6·2–1577·4 |
| α-Carotene | 180 | 28·7 | 3·0–388·4 |
| Lycopene | 180 | 422·0 | 13·9–1521·7 |
| Lutein + zeaxanthin | 180 | 183·0 | 26·5–533·0 |
| β-Cryptoxanthin | 180 | 89·6 | 8·5–356·8 |
| α-Tocopherol | 180 | 12 414·1 | 175·2–34 687·8 |
| γ-Tocopherol | 180 | 1340·7 | 151·0–4386·0 |
| Maternal intake (μg/d) | |||
| α-Carotene | 132 | 528·2 | 6·9–4719·5 |
| β-Carotene | 132 | 4751·0 | 321·8–17 513·22 |
| β-Cryptoxanthin | 132 | 124·0 | 11·0–844·5 |
| Lycopene | 132 | 4596·8 | 170·9–24 654·1 |
| Lutein + zeaxanthin | 132 | 2398·9 | 177·4–16 316·3 |
| Retinol activity equivalents | 132 | 1325·1 | 272·3–4724·7 |
| Vitamin E (mg/d) | 132 | 13·7 | 1·97–221·5 |
Fig. 1.Frequency of vitamin A deficiency, insufficiency and sufficiency by race. The frequency of serum retinol levels <0·70 and ≤1·05 μmol/l was significantly different in non-whites v. whites (P = 0·04, Fisher's exact test).
Results of the logistic regression analysis for vitamin A deficiency (serum retinol ≤1·05 μmol/l)
(Odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals)
| Variable | OR | 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Race (non-white | 2·17 | 1·16, 4·05 | 0·01 |
| Maternal age | 1·01 | 0·96, 1·07 | 0·61 |
| Maternal smoking status | 0·69 | 0·29, 1·63 | 0·39 |
Fig. 2.Frequency of vitamin E insufficiency and sufficiency by race. The frequency of serum α-tocopherol levels ≤8620·7 µg/l (<20 µmol/l) was significantly different in non-whites v. whites (P = 0·004, Fisher's exact test).
Results of the logistic regression analysis for vitamin E insufficiency (serum α-tocopherol levels of ≤8620·7 µg/l)
(Odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals)
| Variable | OR | 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Race (non-white | 3·52 | 1·51, 8·10 | 0·003 |
| Maternal age | 0·97 | 0·90, 1·05 | 0·47 |
| Maternal smoking status | 1·82 | 0·66, 5·05 | 0·25 |
Results of the logistic regression analysis for vitamin E intakes below the RDA (15 mg α-tocopherol/d)
(Odds ratios and 95 % confidence intervals)
| Variable | OR | 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Household food security (low | 5·55 | 1·72, 17·27 | 0·003 |
| Maternal age | 0·94 | 0·86, 1·02 | 0·11 |
| Energy intake | 0·99 | 0·98, 1·00 | 0·0005 |
| Insurance status | 1·13 | 0·47, 2·74 | 0·78 |
| Food desert status | 1·61 | 0·37, 7·0 | 0·52 |