Abstract
To report on vitamin D status, measured as plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration (25(OH)D), the prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency, and to explore associations between vitamin D status and background characteristics. Data were collected in a National Dietary Survey, Riksmaten adolescents 2016-2017. The participants completed dietary assessments and questionnaires on the web and wore accelerometers. (25(OH)D) was measured with a MS method. Representative survey conducted in schools throughout Sweden. Participants attended school years 5 (Y5, mean age 12. 5 years), 8 (Y8, mean age 14. 5 years) and 11 (Y11, mean age 18 years), and included 1100 participants. Overall, there was no difference in plasma 25(OH)D between girls and boys. Vitamin D insufficiency differed between the three school years. The prevalence of insufficiency in Y5 was 32 (boys) and 48 (girls) percent, while in Y11 62 (boys) and 43 (girls) percent. The prevalence of deficiency in Y11 was 16 and 15 % in boys and girls, respectively. Being born outside of Sweden was associated with a 10-fold increased risk of being vitamin D deficient. Deficiency was also associated with longer time spent in sedentary intensity, a lower consumption of fortified dairy products and fats and oils. Vitamin D deficiency was most common in the oldest age group and being born outside of Sweden increased the risk of being deficient. The present study will form a baseline for future follow-up studies of the implementation of a new mandatory vitamin D fortification policy in 2018.
Highlights
Vitamin D is needed for the metabolism of calcium and phosphorus and is important for the mineralization of the skeleton and teeth
A majority of the participants lived in an urban area, and most participants were born in Sweden
The proportion of participants with deficiency (plasma 25(OH)D concentration
Summary
Vitamin D is needed for the metabolism of calcium and phosphorus and is important for the mineralization of the skeleton and teeth. The hallmark of vitamin D deficiency is rickets in children and osteomalacia in adults. There is evidence that vitamin D may exert effects on extraskeletal organs and tissues. Associations with cancer, cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, immune response, infectious disease, neuropsychological function and others have been reported [1; 2; 3; 4]. The evidence for a causal link to some of these outcomes are not entirely clear, and large randomised controlled trials have largely failed to confirm beneficial effects of vitamin D supplementation on different outcomes [5]. Mendelian randomisation studies have failed to confirm causal links [6; 7]
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