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Estimating Vitamin C Intake Requirements in Diabetes Mellitus: Analysis of NHANES 2017-2018 and EPIC-Norfolk Cohorts

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ANTIOXIDANTS
卷 12, 期 10, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox12101863

关键词

vitamin C; ascorbic acid; diabetes; diabetes mellitus; body weight; BMI; C-reactive protein; CRP; dietary intake; dietary requirements; NHANES; EPIC-Norfolk

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People with diabetes have 1.4 to 1.6 times higher requirements for vitamin C than those without diabetes, requiring an additional daily intake of approximately 30-40 mg of vitamin C.
Vitamin C is an essential enzyme cofactor and antioxidant with pleiotropic roles in human physiology. Circulating vitamin C concentrations are lower in people with diabetes mellitus, suggesting a higher dietary requirement for the vitamin. We interrogated the NHANES 2017-2018 and EPIC-Norfolk datasets to compare vitamin C requirements between those with and without diabetes mellitus using dose-concentration relationships fitted with sigmoidal (four-parameter logistic) curves. The NHANES cohort (n = 2828 non-supplementing adults) comprised 488 (17%) participants with diabetes (self-reported or HbA1c >= 6.5%). The participants with diabetes had a lower vitamin C status (median [IQR]) than those without (38 [17, 52] mu mol/L vs. 44 [25, 61] mu mol/L, p < 0.0001), despite comparable dietary intakes between the two groups (51 [26, 93] mg/d vs. 53 [24, 104] mg/d, p = 0.5). Dose-concentration relationships indicated that the group without diabetes reached adequate vitamin C concentrations (50 mu mol/L) with an intake of 81 (72, 93) mg/d, whilst those with diabetes required an intake of 166 (126, NA) mg/d. In the EPIC-Norfolk cohort, comprising 20692 non-supplementing adults, 475 (2.3%) had self-reported diabetes at baseline. The EPIC cohort had a lower BMI than the NHANES cohort (26 [24, 28] kg/m(2) vs. 29 [25, 34] kg/m(2), p < 0.0001). Correspondingly, the EPIC participants without diabetes required a lower vitamin C intake of 64 (63, 65) mg/d while those with diabetes required 129 (104, NA) mg/d to reach adequate circulating vitamin C status. C-reactive protein concentrations were strongly correlated with body weight and BMI and provided a surrogate biomarker for vitamin C requirements. In conclusion, people with diabetes had 1.4 to 1.6 fold higher requirements for vitamin C than those without diabetes. This corresponds to additional daily vitamin C intake requirements of similar to 30-40 mg for people with diabetes, equating to a total daily intake of at least 125 mg/d.

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