Vitamin D levels during pregnancy and associations with birth weight and body composition of the newborn: a longitudinal multiethnic population-based study.

The British journal of nutrition
Q1
Apr 2017
Citations:45
Influential Citations:1
Observational Studies (Human)
81
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Population-based, prospective cohort (STORK Groruddalen) of pregnant women in Groruddalen, Oslo, Norway. 823 women enrolled; multiethnic (59% ethnic minorities); healthy, singleton pregnancies; maternal 25(OH)D measured at gestational weeks 15 and 28; outcomes included birth weight and a range of neonatal anthropometrics; study design: observational cohort.
Intervention
Vitamin D3 supplementation recommended for 25(OH)D < 37 nmol/L at gestational weeks 15 and 28; dosage and duration not specified.
Results
Maternal 25(OH)D levels showed associations with birth weight and several neonatal body measurements in unadjusted analyses, but after adjusting for ethnicity these associations disappeared. Ethnicity had strong independent associations with neonatal size. Some sex-specific associations emerged (abdominal circumference in girls; sum of skinfolds in boys), but these did not change the overall conclusion. No independent relationship between maternal vitamin D status and neonatal anthropometric measures; ethnicity remains the dominant predictor. Further high-quality randomized trials are needed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation in deficient pregnant populations affects neonatal outcomes beyond bone health; potential sex-specific effects warrant further study.
Limitations
Ethnic groups merged into broad regional categories; limited statistical power and potential residual confounding; categorization of 25(OH)D may not be optimal; missing data and exclusions; observational design; measurement method (competitive RIAs) with batch variation; generalizability limited to multiethnic European contexts.

Abstract

We investigated associations between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) in pregnancy and birth weight and other neonatal anthropometric measures. The present study was a population-based, multiethnic cohort study of 719 pregnant women (59 % ethnic m...