Abstract

Vitamin D status, measured in a Vitamin D Standardization Program certified laboratory, was assessed among children of South Asian and European ethnicity living in the national capital region of Canada to explore factors that may account for inadequate status. Demographic information, dietary and supplemental vitamin D over 30d prior to measurement of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD), and anthropometry were measured (age 6.0-18.9 y; n= 58/group; February-March 2015). No group related differences in age, height and body mass index (BMI) Z-scores or in food vitamin D intakes were observed. Standardized serum 25OHD was lower in South Asian children (mean± SD: 39.0± 16.8nmol/L vs. European: 58.4± 15.8nmol/L). A greater proportion of South Asian children had serum 25OHD <40nmol/L (56.9 vs. 8.6%, P< 0.0001) and fewer took supplements (31 vs. 50%, P= 0.0389). In a multi-factorial model (r2= 0.54), lower vitamin D status was associated with overweight/obese BMI and older age (14-18 y); no interaction with ethnicity was observed. Lower vitamin D status was associated with lower total vitamin D intake only in South Asian children. This study reinforces the importance of public health actions towards meeting vitamin D intake recommendations among those of high-risk deficiency. Novelty: A higher proportion of South Asian vs. European children had inadequate vitamin D status. Lower vitamin D status was associated with a BMI in the overweight/obese range. Lower vitamin D status was associated with lower total vitamin D intake in South Asian but not European children.

Highlights

  • The prevalence of inadequate vitamin D status in a population is assessed by the percentage of individuals with serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) falling below an accepted threshold

  • The objective of this study was to assess vitamin D status among children of South Asian and European ethnicity in Canada, and to explore whether exogenous intakes and BMI are implicated as potential modifiable factors

  • 116 children from 6.3 to 18.9 years of age participated in this study

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Summary

Introduction

The prevalence of inadequate vitamin D status in a population is assessed by the percentage of individuals with serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) falling below an accepted threshold. A threshold value of 40 nmol/L, determined by the Institute of Medicine in the US, corresponds to the Estimated Average Requirement (EAR) of 400 IU of exogenous vitamin D daily for people in the general population over 1 year of age, and assumes minimal sun exposure (Ross et al 2011). Specific sampling of groups potentially at risk of inadequate vitamin. Vitamin D status is of concern in this group since adults have mean 25OHD values approximately 40% lower than those of Europeans (Nagasaka et al 2018; Sulistyoningrum et al 2012). 27-29% of females and 36-44% of males have 25OHD < 40 nmol/L in the fall and spring, respectively – values that are much higher than those of European Canadians (5-10% in the fall and spring, respectively; (Nagasaka et al 2018))

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