4.3 Review

Vitamin D in pregnancy: current perspectives and future directions

Journal

THERAPEUTIC ADVANCES IN MUSCULOSKELETAL DISEASE
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 145-154

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/1759720X17706453

Keywords

Vitamin D and pregnant women; vitamin D requirements; Neonatal vitamin D status

Categories

Funding

  1. Science Foundation Ireland [SFI/14/SP INFANT/B3067, 12/RC/2272]
  2. European Commission for KMO'C under the Integrated Project ODIN (Food-based Solutions for Optimal Vitamin D Nutrition and Health through the Life Cycle) [613977]

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As neonatal vitamin D status is determined by circulating maternal 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations, prevention of maternal vitamin D deficiency during pregnancy is essential for the avoidance of neonatal deficiency. However, a high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency has been extensively reported among gravidae and neonates from ethnic minorities and white populations resident at high latitude. Currently, regulatory authorities recommend vitamin D intakes for pregnant women that are similar to non-pregnant adults of the same age, at 10-15 mu g/day (400-600 IU), to meet 25(OH)D thresholds of 25-50 nmol/liter. The lack of pregnancy-specific dietary recommendations is due to inadequate data indicating whether nutritional requirements for vitamin D during pregnancy differ from the non-pregnant state. In addition, there are few dose-response studies to determine the maternal 25(OH)D response to vitamin D intake throughout pregnancy at high latitude. These data are also required to determine vitamin D requirements during pregnancy for prevention of neonatal deficiency, an outcome which is likely to require a higher maternal 25(OH)D concentration than prevention of maternal deficiency only. With regard to the impact of vitamin D on perinatal health outcomes, which could guide pregnancy-specific 25(OH)D thresholds, dietary intervention studies to date have been inconsistent and recent systematic reviews have highlighted issues of low quality and a high risk of bias as drawbacks in the trial evidence to date. Many observational studies have been hampered by a reliance on retrospective data, unclear reporting, suboptimal clinical phenotyping and incomplete subject characterization. Current investigations of vitamin D metabolism during pregnancy have potentially exciting implications for clinical research. This paper provides an update of current dietary recommendations for vitamin D in pregnant women and a synopsis of the evidence relating vitamin D status with maternal and infant health.

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