| Literature DB >> 30626163 |
Charles Fink1,2, Rachel L Peters3, Jennifer J Koplin4,5, Justin Brown6,7, Katrina J Allen8,9,10,11.
Abstract
Vitamin D is critical to children's skeletal development and health. Despite this, the factors which determine vitamin D concentrations during infancy remain incompletely understood. This article reviews the literature assessing the factors which can affect vitamin D status in infancy, including antenatal and postnatal vitamin D supplementation. Observational data supports that dietary intake of vitamin D, UV exposure, and geographic factors contribute significantly to infants' vitamin D status, but the relationship is unclear regarding genetic variation, ethnicity, and maternal vitamin D status. Randomised controlled trials have compared higher versus lower doses of infant vitamin D supplementation, but no studies have compared infant vitamin D supplementation to placebo and eliminated external sources of vitamin D to fully quantify its effect on vitamin D status. Knowledge gaps remain regarding the factors associated with optimal vitamin D concentrations in infants-including key factors such as ethnicity and genetic variation-and further studies are needed.Entities:
Keywords: UV exposure; breastfeeding; ethnicity; infant formula; infants; latitude; maternal supplementation; socioeconomic status; vitamin D; vitamin D supplementation
Year: 2019 PMID: 30626163 PMCID: PMC6351953 DOI: 10.3390/children6010007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Estimates of vitamin D intake in fully formula-fed infants.
| Age (Months) | Formula Intake (mL/kg/day) | Median Weight (kg) | Total Formula Intake (mL/day) | Estimated Vitamin D Intake (IU/day) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0–3 | 150 | 6 (3 months) | 900 | 324–468 |
| 3–6 | 120 | 8 (6 months) | 960 | 345–499 |
| 6–12 | 100 | 10 (12 months) | 1000 | 360–520 |
Adapted from National Health and Medical Research Council infant feeding guidelines [30] and World Health Organisation growth charts [38]. IU = international units.
Study design, participants, and details of RCTs assessing 400 IU/day vitamin D supplementation in 1–12-month-old infants.
| First Author | Dose (IU) | Comparison (IU) | Intervention Duration (months old) | Blinding | Sample Size of 400 IU Group | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomisation | Analysis | ||||||
|
| 400 | placebo | 1–6 | double | 98 | 86 * | Australia (35°S) |
|
| 400 | no treatment | 1–12 | none | 41 | 30 | Spain (43°N) |
|
| 400 | 200,600,800 | 1–9 | double | 60 | 30 | USA (41°N) |
|
| 400 | 800,1200,1600 | 1–12 | double | 39 | 29 | Canada (45°N) |
* this number includes infants who discontinued the intervention, and it is unclear if it includes infants who attended the 6-month endpoint but did not have their 25(OH)D measured. IU = international units.
Figure 1Mean serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) measurements in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) assessing 400 IU/day vitamin D supplementation in 1–12-month-old infants. These measurements are the mean serum 25(OH)D at each timepoint in each experimental group which received 400 IU of vitamin D supplementation in these studies.