Science & Technology: Vitamin D Deficiency Widespread During Pregnancy

Issue Date: 
March 12, 2007

Significant racial disparities also noted despite use of prenatal multivitamin supplements

Even regular use of prenatal multivitamin supplements is not adequate to prevent vitamin D insufficiency, Pitt researchers reported in last month’s issue of the Journal of Nutrition, the publication of the American Society for Nutrition.

A condition linked to rickets and other musculoskeletal and health complications, vitamin D insufficiency was found to be widespread among women during pregnancy, particularly in the northern latitudes.

“In our study, more than 80 percent of African American women and nearly half of White women tested at delivery had levels of vitamin D that were too low, even though more than 90 percent of them used prenatal vitamins during pregnancy,” said Lisa Bodnar, an assistant professor of epidemiology in Pitt’s Graduate School of Public Health and lead author of the study. “The numbers also were striking for their newborns—92.4 percent of African American babies and 66.1 percent of White infants were found to have insufficient vitamin D at birth.”

A vitamin closely associated with bone health, vitamin D deficiency early in life is associated with rickets—a disorder characterized by soft bones and thought to have been eradicated in the United States more than 50 years ago—as well as increased risk for Type 1 diabetes, asthma, and schizophrenia.

“A newborn’s vitamin D stores are completely reliant on vitamin D from the mother,” observed Bodnar, who also is an assistant investigator in the Pitt-affiliated Magee-Womens Research Institute (MWRI). “Not surprisingly, poor maternal vitamin D status during pregnancy is a major risk factor for infant rickets, which again is becoming a major health problem.”

For their study, Bodnar and her colleagues evaluated data that was collected on 200 Black women and 200 White women who were randomly selected from more than 2,200 women enrolled in the MWRI’s Pregnancy Exposures and Preeclampsia Prevention Study between 1997 and 2001. Samples of maternal blood were collected prior to 22 weeks’ pregnancy and again just before delivery, Samples of newborn umbilical cord blood also were tested for 25 hydroxyvitamin D, an indicator of vitamin D status.

Finding such a proliferation of vitamin D insufficiency in spite of prenatal multivitamin use is troubling, Bodnar noted, and suggests that higher dosages, differing vitamin formulations, or a moderate increase in sunlight exposure might be necessary to boost vitamin D stores to healthier levels.

“In both groups, vitamin D concentrations were highest in summer and lowest in winter and spring,” said senior author James M. Roberts, MWRI director and professor and vice chair of research in the Pitt School of Medicine’s Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, and Reproductive Sciences. “But differences were smaller between seasons for African American mothers and babies, whose vitamin D deficiency remained more constant.”

Because vitamin D is made by the body in reaction to sunlight exposure, it has long been known that vitamin D deficiency is more common among darker-skinned individuals, particularly in more northern latitudes, where less ultraviolet radiation reaches the Earth. Indeed, vitamin D deficiency is more than three times as common in winter than in summer for all women of childbearing age in the United States.

Even so, the Pitt researchers’ findings are cause for concern, according to Marjorie L. McCullough, senior epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society.

“This study is among the largest to examine these questions in this at-risk population,” McCullough wrote in a Journal of Nutrition editorial that accompanied the Pitt study. “By the end of pregnancy, 90 percent of all women were taking prenatal vitamins, and yet deficiency was still common.”

Vitamin D is found naturally in fatty fish but few other foods. Primary dietary sources include fortified foods such as milk and some ready-to-eat cereals and vitamin supplements. Sun exposure for skin synthesis of vitamin D also remains critical.

“Our study shows that current vitamin D dietary intake recommendations are not enough to meet the demands of pregnancy,” Bodnar said. “Improving vitamin D status has tremendous capacity to benefit public health.”

Pitt’s study was funded by the National Institutes of Health