4.7 Article

Maternal Vitamin D Status and Adverse Birth Outcomes in Children from Rural Western Kenya

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 8, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu8120794

Keywords

maternal vitamin D status; pregnancy outcomes; stunting; Africa; malaria and helminth infections

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute [CA102667]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious diseases at the National Institutes of Health [AI 098511]
  3. D43 training Grant [NCI 153707]
  4. Burroughs Welcome [CAMS 1006818]

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Maternal plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) status and its association with pregnancy outcomes in malaria holoendemic regions of sub-Saharan Africa is poorly defined. We examined this association and any potential interaction with malaria and helminth infections in an ongoing pregnancy cohort study in Kenya. The association of maternal plasma 25(OH)D status with pregnancy outcomes and infant anthropometric measurements at birth was determined in a subset of women (n = 63). Binomial and linear regression analyses were used to examine associations between maternal plasma 25(OH)D and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Fifty-one percent of the women had insufficient (< 75 nmol/L) and 21% had deficient (< 50 nmol/L) plasma 25(OH)D concentration at enrollment. At birth, 74.4% of the infants had insufficient and 30% had deficient plasma 25(OH)D concentrations, measured in cord blood. Multivariate analysis controlling for maternal age and body mass index (BMI) at enrollment and gestational age at delivery found that deficient plasma 25(OH)D levels were associated with a four-fold higher risk of stunting in neonates (p = 0.04). These findings add to the existing literature about vitamin D and its association with linear growth in resource-limited settings, though randomized clinical trials are needed to establish causation.

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