4.4 Article

Racial and seasonal differences in 25-hydroxyvitamin D detected in maternal sera frozen for over 40 years

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION
Volume 101, Issue 2, Pages 278-284

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0007114508981460

Keywords

Vitamin D; Pregnancy; Racial groups; Seasons

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K01 MH074092, P30 DK046204, R01 MH060335]
  2. National Institutes of Child Health and Human Development
  3. National Institute of Mental Health
  4. Stanley Medical Research Foundation
  5. American Society for Bariatric Surgery and Pfizer

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Serum banks from large, decades-old epidemiological studies provide a valuable opportunity to explore the contributions of in utero vitamin D exposure to fetal origins of adult diseases. We compared 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) by race and season (two powerful predictors of vitamin D status) in sera frozen for >= 40 years with sera frozen for <= 2 years to determine whether 25(OH)D is stable enough to test vitamin D-related hypotheses. Data and sera came from seventy-nine pregnant women at 29-32 weeks' gestation in the Boston Collaborative Perinatal Project (CPP; 1959-66) and 124 women at 20-36 weeks' gestation in a 2003-2006 Pittsburgh cohort study. Multivariable linear regression models were used to test main and joint effects of race and season after confounder adjustment. In both cohorts, serum 25(OH)D levels were lower among black than white women (CPP 33.3 v. 46.7 nmol/l, P<0.01; Pittsburgh 47.1 v. 89.6 nmol/l; P<0.0001) and in winter than summer (CPP 32.7 v. 47.6 nmol/l, P<0.0001; Pittsburgh 66.7 v. 89.8 nmol/l, P<0.001), with no evidence of a race X season interaction in either cohort. Differences remained significant after confounder adjustment. When CPP and Pittsburgh results were compared, there was no 4 significant difference in the race or season effects. The similarity in the relative change in 25(OH)D in these cohorts by two powerful predictors A of vitamin D status suggests that, even if 25(OH)D deteriorated somewhat, it did so similarly across samples. Therefore, trends could be obtained from the decades-old serum data that would be relevant in exploring vitamin D-related hypotheses in future studies.

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