Title: VITAMIN D3
1Vitamin D Current Research and Recommendations
Across the Life Span
- Seema Desai, MS, RD, LDN, CNSD Kerry Harwood,
MSN, RN
2Vitamin D Overview
- It is a fat soluble vitamin.
- Not just a vitamin it is a prehormone
- Found in some food and made in the body after
exposure to UV rays - Major biological function is to maintain normal
blood levels of Ca and Po4 - Other tissues like macrophages, prostrate tissue
also have vit D receptor
3History of Vitamin D
- Existed over 500 million years
- Industrial revolution rickets
- Cod liver oil common folklore medicine
- Discovery of Vit D as the antirachitic factor in
cod liver oil(1920) - Discovery of conversion of 7-dehydrocholesterol
in the skin to vit D (1937) - Antirachitic property in food
- Fortification of food with vitamin D was patented
- Complete eradication of rickets in US
- US public service issuing warnings about
sun-induced health risk - Over next 30 yrs skin cancer hazard of excessive
sun exposure became well established -
4Structure of Vitamin D
5(No Transcript)
6Endocrine, paracrine and intracrine functions of
Vitamin D
7Vitamin D Across the Lifespan
- Factors influencing accumulation of bone
minerals - Heredity
- Gender
- Diet
- Physical activity
- Endocrine status
- Maternal vitamin D status
8Maternal Vitamin D Status
- Association of low intake of milk and vit D
during pregnancy with decreased birth weight. - C.A. Mannion, Katherine Gray-Donald, kristine G.
Koski. CMAJ April 25, 2006 - -Women between ages 19-45yrs
- -In Calgary
- -lt/ 250 ml of milk low birth weight
- -milk or vit D independent predictor of BW
- -1 cup milk 41 gm increase in BW
- -1 Mcg increase in dietary vit D 11 gm
increase in BW
9Maternal vitamin D.
- Maternal vitamin D status during pregnancy and
childhood bone mass at age 9yrs. - M.K. Javaid, SR Crozeir at al. Lancet Jan 7 2006
- -198 children born in 1991-92 in South Hampton UK
- -children were followed up at age 9yrs
- -31 mother had insufficient and 18 had
deficient serum vit D during late pregnancy - -decrease vit D in mothers decrease bone
mineral content in children at age 9 yrs - -mothers exposure to UV rays and use of vit d
predicted vit d and childhood bone mass
10Breastfed infants
- Vitamin D deficiency in breastfed infants in
Iowa. - Ekhard E. Ziegler, Bruce w. Hollis, Steven E
Nelson and Janice M. Jeter. Pediatrics 2006 - -84 breastfed infants
- -blood samples and dietary records were taken
- -35 infants were unsupplemented
- -49 infants were either supplemented with
formula or vit D - -10 were vit D deficient
- -Marked seasonal affect more so in the
unsupplemented group - -mainly but not exclusively during winter and
occurred in light and dark skinned infants
11 Healthy adolescents
- Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency among healthy
adolescents. - Catherine M Gordon, Kerrin C. DePeter, Henry A.
Feldman, Estherann Grace, Jean Emans. Arch
pediatr Adolesc med June 2004 - -307 healthy adolescents 11-18 yrs,
- -annual physical between july 2001-june 2003
- -Data collected on age, sex, ethnicity, Ht, wt,
exercise, medical hx diet - -Blood samples were drawn at the end of the
visit - -24.1 of the participants were vit D deficient
- -highest prevalence in African American
- -Most prevalent during winter
- -no difference in prevalence between girls and
boys - - correlation between soft drink consumption
and vit D deficiency - -inverse correlation between vit D deficiency
and milk and cold cereal consumption -
12Young girls in southern US
- Serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D concentration in girls
aged 4-8 y living in the southeastern United
States. Stein et al.. Am J clinical nutrition
2006 - -168 prepubertal girls 4-8 yrs old
- -120 non-Hispanic white
- -48 non-Hispanic black
- -Oct 1997-Oct 2000 at U of GA
- -with in 1 wk of blood draw bone scan,
anthropometric measure dietary intake, and
physical activity were assessed
https//docme.mc.duke.edu/ada/index.asp
13- Mean vitaminD, Calcium and multivitamin use was
higher in white girls than in black - Both races had mean dietary vitamin D intake
above adequate levels - Race and season strongest predictor of vit D
status - Black girls had lower mean vit D value
- Vitamin D value were significantly higher in
summer than in winter - Living at low latitude does not entirely prevent
poor vitamin D status
14Milk Allergies and vitamin D deficiency
- Milk allergy and vitamin D deficiency rickets a
common disorder associated with an uncommon
disease. Case Report - Joyce w. Yu at el
- Annals of allergy, asthma and immunologyApril
2006 - -Case report of Vit D deficiency rickets in 2 yr
old boy with - milk allergy
- -BF for 6-7 months
- -failed trail of cows milk formula
- -drank 500-700ml of fruit juice with no vit D
and Ca supplementation - -18 months of age started to regress
- -Lab values Vit D of 8 mmol/l, Ca 1.98 mmol/l,
alk phos - -2,822u/l
15- Discharged taking 4000IU of vit D, 200mg
calcitriol, and 300mg elemental Ca - 2 weeks later was able to stand, and his lab
values were improved. -
16Adults
17Vitamin D Deficiency in Hospitalized Patients
18Vitamin D Deficiency in Renal Transplant Patients
19Vitamin D Inadequacy in Post-Menopausal Women
20Vitamin D and Cancer
- May influence both incidence and mortality
- Linked with GI cancer, prostate and breast
cancers, lymphomas, endometrial and lung cancers
21Something New Under the Sun?
- Apperly FL. The relation of solar radiation to
cancer mortality in North America. - Cancer Research.1941(1)191-195
221979 - 1981
- Vitamin D receptors found in malignant melanoma
cells and myeloid leukemia cells - 1,25(OH)2D inhibited melanoma cell proliferation
and induced myeloid cell differentiation
23Northern vs. Southern U.S.
1 2 extra skin cancer deaths (per 100,000)
30 40 extra deaths for other major cancers (per
100,000)
241998
- Serum levels of 1,25(OH)2D are tightly controlled
by the kidneys dont vary by sun exposure so
how could vitamin D contribute to the north-south
gradients and African-American excess in cancer
rates? - Non-renal cells discovered to hydroxylate 25(OH)D
and synthesize 1,25(OH)2D locally.
25Vitamin D Cancer
- Environmental sunlight diet
- Calcitriol (hormonal form of vitamin D) controls
the differentiation of many cells that possess
vitamin D receptors (VDR) - Induce cell differentiation and apoptosis of
cancer cells while inhibiting cell proliferation,
angiogenesis, and metastasis - Genetic VDR polymorphisms
26June, 2007 American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Women who regularly took vitamin D3 and calcium
had a 60 reduction in all-cancer incidence
compared with a group taking placebo and a 77
reduction when the analysis was confined to
cancers diagnosed after the first 12 months.
27Lung cancer
- 1,25(OH)2D
- inhibits proliferation and induces
differentiation of lung cancer cell lines
(Higashimoto, et al., 1996, Guzey, et al., 1998) - inhibits metastatic growth and locoregional
recurrence of lung cancer cells in mice (Wiers,
et al., 2000)
28Lung cancer
- 456 patients with early stage NSCLC
- Median age 69
- 96 Caucasian
- Data collection
- Season of surgery
- Food frequency questionnaire
- Recurrence free survival (RFS)
- Overall survival (OS)
- Zhou, et al., 2005
29Lung cancer
- Patients who had surgery during summer with the
highest vitamin D intake had better RFS that
patients who had surgery during winter with the
lowest vitamin D intake. - Similar associations were seen for overall
survival. - Zhou, et al., 2005
30Lung cancer
- Insert survival graph from Zhou article here
31Breast cancer
- 1,25(OH)2D
- inhibits cell proliferation, induces
differentiation apoptosis, and inhibits
angiogenesis in normal and breast cancer cells
(Colston, et al, 1989, Saez, et al, 1993,
Mantell, et al., 2000) - suppresses high-fat diet-induced mammary
tumorigenesis in rats (Jacobson, et al., 1989,
Xue, 1999)
32Breast cancer
- Inverse association between vitamin D calcium
intake and breast density - Inconclusive results in studies looking at VDR
genetic polymorphisms and breast cancer - Inverse association between high sunlight
exposure and breast cancer risk - Association may be stronger for premenopausal
than postmenopausal women due to interactions
between vitamin D, the VDR, estrogen and
insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) - Cui Rohan, 2006
33Breast cancer
- Case-control study 972 women with
newly-diagnosed breast cancer 1,135 healthy
controls - Interviews regarding vitamin D-related exposures,
e.g. outdoor activities, use of sunscreen,
dietary contributions - Knight, 2007
34Breast cancer
- More frequent sun exposure during adolescence was
associated with a 35 reduction in breast cancer
risk later in life - Lower risk also linked to cod liver oil and milk
intake gt 10 glasses / week - Milder protection seen for people age 20 29
- No protection for people over age 45
35Breast cancer
- Epidemiologic study of different regions of
Norway, each with a different annual UV exposure - Prognosis 15 25 better for women diagnosed /
treated in the summer vs. winter - ltget this article Breast Cancer Research and
Treatment, MaygtKnight , 2007
36Endometrial cancer
- Is ultraviolet B irradiance inversely associated
with incidence rates of endometrial cancer an
ecological study of 107 countries. - Mohr, et al, 2007
37Endometrial cancer
- Objective perform an ecological analysis of the
relationship between low levels of ultraviolet B
irradiance and age-standardized incidence rates
of endometrial cancer by country, controlling for
known confounders
38Endometrial cancer
- 107 countries
- UVB irradiance
- cloud cover
- intake of energy from animal sources
- proportion overweight
- skin pigmentation
- cigarette consumption
- health expenditure
- total fertility rates
- vs. age-standardized incidence of endometrial
cancer
39Endometrial cancer
- Association found between endometrial cancer
incidence rates and - Low UVB irradiance
- High intake of energy from animal sources (?
IGF-I?) - Per capital health expenditure
- Proportion of population overweight
40Pancreatic cancer
- Prospectively collected diet and lifestyle data
- Nurses Health Study 75,427 women
- Health Professionals Follow-up Study 46,771 men
- Pancreatic cancer risk 41 lower among those who
consumed gt 600 IU of vitamin D / day vs. those
who consumed lt 150 IU / day - Skinner, et al., 2006
41Cancer Survival
- Summer / Fall (vs. Winter / Spring) diagnosis
associated with improved survival in - Colorectal cancer
- Hodgkins lymphoma
- NSCLC
- Breast cancer
42Cancer Survival
- Intermittent sun exposure associated with
increased survival following a diagnosis of
melanoma - Berwick, et al., 2005
43Type 2 Diabetes
- Altered vitamin D and calcium homeostasis may
play a role in development of type 2 diabetes - Low serum levels of 25(OH)D are associated with
impaired pancreatic ß cell function and insulin
resistance - High calcium intake is inversely associated with
body weight
44Type 2 Diabetes
- Nurses Health Study 83,779 women (98
Caucasian) - Daily intake of gt1,200 mg calcium gt800IU
vitamin D was associated with a 33 lower risk of
type 2 diabetes compared with an intake of lt600
mg calcium lt400 IU vitamin D - Pittas, et al., 2006
45Type 1 Diabetes
- Birth-cohort study in Finland all women due to
give birth in 1966 enrolled - 10,366 children born alive and followed to one
year 81 diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes - Children who regularly took recommended dose of
vitamin D (2000 IU) had a RR of 0.22 compared
with those who did not. - Children suspected of having rickets had a RR of
3.0 compared with those not suspected. - Hopponen, et al., 2001
46Metabolic Syndrome
- Third National Health Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES III) - 8,421 men and non-pregnant women gt 20 years of
age and had fasted gt 8 hrs - Unadjusted prevalence of metabolic syndrome -
21.9
47Metabolic Syndrome
- After adjustments for known risk factors, odd of
metabolic syndrome decreased progressively across
increasing concentrations of 25(OH)D - Relative risk compared with bottom quintile of
vitamin D level - 2nd quintile 0.85
- 3rd quintile 0.75
- 4th quintile 0.62
- 5th quintile 0.46
- Ford, et al., 2005
48Pulmonary / COPD
- Third National Health Nutrition Examination
Survey (NHANES III) - 14,000 subjects
- Dose-response correlation between percent
predicted FEV1 and FVC values and circulating
25(OH)D - Plausibility vitamin D shown to prevent
experimental inflammatory diseases in mice
including allergic asthma - Black, et al., Chest, 2005
49Congestive Heart Failure
- RCT of vitamin D calcium vs. placebo calcium
x 9 months in subjects with CHF - 93 subjects completed study
- Anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin 10
significantly higher - Suppressed release of TNF-a
- No difference in survival but blood levels not
optimized - Schleithoff, et al., 2006
50Hypertension
- Prospectively followed two cohorts
- Nurses Health Study 1198 women
- Health Professionals Follow-up Study 613 men
- Relative risk of hypertension
- lt 15 ng/mL vs gt 30 ng/mL 25(OH)D
- Men RR 6.13
- Women RR 2.67
51Stroke
52Chronic Kidney Disease
53Multiple Sclerosis
54Osteo- Rheumatoid Arthritis
55Where do we go from here?
- Routine screening
- Rectify deficiency / insufficiency
- Maintain levels through a patient-specific
combination of diet, supplementation, and sun
exposure
56Recommendations
- Annual testing of 25(OH)D
- Consider time of year in testing
- Lowest levels generally towards end of winter,
early spring
57Vitamin D Assessment
- Lab assays are available to measure both 25(OH)D
and 1,25-D. - 25(OH)D closely reflects total amount of vit D
produced in the skin and from diet - D2 and D3 have similar biological activity
- Both D2 and D3 should be measured
- DO NOT USE - 1,25-D. This can often be normal
with vit D deficiency
58Goals in Maintaining Vitamin D Levels
- Prevent disease of deficiency rickets,
osteomalacia - Prevent complications of insufficiency impaired
calcium absorption and increased bone resorption - Minimize risks of future disease cancer,
cardiopulmonary diseases, diabetes, other
immune-related diseases
5925(OH)D concentration
- To prevent deficiency disease
- gt 25 nmol / L
- To prevent complications of insufficiency
- gt 50 nmol/L
- For maximum bone health and prevention of chronic
disease - 75 100 nmol/L
60Who is at greatest risk?
- Low dietary intake BF infants, children who do
not drink fortified milk - Malabsorption syndrome
- Severe liver disease
- Kidney disease
- Drugs
- Higher latitudes
- People who spend little time outside
- Older adults
- Decreased sun exposure due to cultural reasons
- Races with high skin melanin levels
61Supplementation
62Supplementation (adults)
- To correct deficiency 50,000 IU vitamin D
weekly x 8 weeks, reassess and repeat if
necessary
63Supplementation (peds)
64IOM Recommendations (AI)
Age Children Men Women Pregnancy lactation
Birth-13 yrs 5mcgs 200IU
14-18yrs 5 200IU 5 200 IU 5 200IU 5 200IU
19-50 Yrs 5 200 IU 5 200 IU 5 200 IU 5 200 IU
51-70 Yrs 10 400 IU 10 400 IU
71 15 600 IU 15 600 IU
65Do recommendations reflect the state of the
science?
- Our studies in children (3 16 years of age)
in Edmonton, Alberta, show that 200 IU daily is
not even adequate for maintaining levels now
considered mildly to moderately deficient (40
nmol/L), let alone optimum (80 nmol/L). - A.B. Jones, Canadian Family Physician, 2006
66Do recommendations reflect the state of the
science?
- Oral doses currently consumed in the US (an
estimated mean of 320 IU / day) are far too low,
and the designation of the 2000 IU/day dosage as
safe by NAS provides latitude to the community to
increase intakes to levels required to reduce
risk of cancer, with essentially no likelihood of
adverse effects. - Grant and Gorham, International J of
Epidemiology, 2006
67Do recommendations reflect the state of the
science?
- the present recommended allowance for vitamin
D 400 IU for individuals aged 50 70 years
is inadequate even to maintain skeletal health
and is probably too low for meaningful anticancer
effects. - Schwartz Blot, J National Cancer Institute, 2006
68National Academy of Science Tolerable Upper
Intake Levels
- Pediatrics 0 12 months
- 1000 IU / Day
- All others
- 2000 IU / Day
69USDHHS Dietary Guidelines for America - 2005
- Special groups elderly and individuals with
dark skin - 1,000 IU / day
70Maintenance (adults)
- To maintain recommended levels 800 - 1000 IU /
day if not getting enough sun exposure to
maintain vitamin D levels or 50,000 IU 1-2 times
monthly
71North American Conference on Vitamin D
- to minimize the health risks associated with
UVB radiation exposure while maximizing the
potential benefits of optimum vitamin D status,
dietary supplementation and small amounts of
sun exposure are the preferred methods of
obtaining vitamin D. - Consensus statement, 2006
72How much sun?
- Depends on
- Age
- Amount of vitamin D obtained from diet
- Skin darkness
- Sunshine intensity
73How much sun?
- Significant skin exposure
- Face, neck, arms, hands
- Arms, legs
- Adequate sun strength
- Time
- 25 of the time it would take to cause pinkness
of the skin (Caucasians) - People with dark skin require significantly more
sun exposure - Holick, 2004
74Food Sources of Vitamin D
- Cod liver oil 1 TBS
- Salmon 3.5 oz.
- Mackerel 3.5 oz.
- Tuna, canned, in oil, 3 oz.
- Sardines 3.5 oz.
- Milk (fortified) 8 oz.
- Ready to eat cereal (fortified) ¾ - 1 cup
- Egg 1 whole
- Liver, 3.5 oz.
- Cheese, swiss 1 oz.
- 1,360 IU
- 360
- 345
- 200
- 250
- 98
- 40
- 20
- 15
- 12