Prenatal exposure to vitamin D from fortified margarine and risk of fractures in late childhood: period and cohort results from 222,000 subjects in the D-tect observational study
Prenatal exposure to vitamin D from fortified margarine and risk of fractures in late childhood: period and cohort results from 222,000 subjects in the D-tect observational study
Prenatal low vitamin D may have consequences for bone health. By means of a nationwide mandatory vitamin D fortification programme, we examined the risk of fractures among 10–18-year-old children from proximate birth cohorts born around the date of the termination of the programme. For all subjects born in Denmark during 1983–1988, civil registration numbers were linked to the Danish National Patient Registry for incident and recurrent fractures occurring at ages 10–18 years. Multiplicative Poisson models were used to examine the association between birth cohort and fracture rates. The variation in fracture rates across birth cohorts was analysed by fitting an age-cohort model to the data. We addressed the potential modification of the effect of vitamin D availability by season of birth. The risk of fractures was increased among both girls and boys who were born before the vitamin D fortification terminated in 1985 (rate ratio (RR) exposed v. non-exposed girls: 1·15 (95 % CI 1·11, 1·20); RR exposed v. non-exposed boys: 1·11 (95 % CI 1·07, 1·14). However, these associations no longer persisted after including the period effects. There was no interaction between season of birth and vitamin D availability in relation to fracture risk. The study did not provide evidence that prenatal exposure to extra vitamin D from a mandatory fortification programme of 1·25 µg vitamin D/100 g margarine was sufficient to influence the risk of fractures in late childhood, regardless of season of birth. Replication studies are needed.
872-881
Handel, Mina N.
05aabe31-af7b-4b60-af15-c063d6d14201
Frederiksen, Peder
8df0581f-3553-43d4-bbc8-58f82ef9f189
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Abrahamsen, Bo
fee8b1eb-c267-4d2a-952a-d1b9f20d0125
Lilienthal Heitmann, Berit
d0c6c168-8d8d-4497-a972-c5bcc009d2f3
2017
Handel, Mina N.
05aabe31-af7b-4b60-af15-c063d6d14201
Frederiksen, Peder
8df0581f-3553-43d4-bbc8-58f82ef9f189
Osmond, Clive
2677bf85-494f-4a78-adf8-580e1b8acb81
Cooper, Cyrus
e05f5612-b493-4273-9b71-9e0ce32bdad6
Abrahamsen, Bo
fee8b1eb-c267-4d2a-952a-d1b9f20d0125
Lilienthal Heitmann, Berit
d0c6c168-8d8d-4497-a972-c5bcc009d2f3
Handel, Mina N., Frederiksen, Peder, Osmond, Clive, Cooper, Cyrus, Abrahamsen, Bo and Lilienthal Heitmann, Berit
(2017)
Prenatal exposure to vitamin D from fortified margarine and risk of fractures in late childhood: period and cohort results from 222,000 subjects in the D-tect observational study.
British Journal of Nutrition, 117 (6), .
(doi:10.1017/S000711451700071X).
Abstract
Prenatal low vitamin D may have consequences for bone health. By means of a nationwide mandatory vitamin D fortification programme, we examined the risk of fractures among 10–18-year-old children from proximate birth cohorts born around the date of the termination of the programme. For all subjects born in Denmark during 1983–1988, civil registration numbers were linked to the Danish National Patient Registry for incident and recurrent fractures occurring at ages 10–18 years. Multiplicative Poisson models were used to examine the association between birth cohort and fracture rates. The variation in fracture rates across birth cohorts was analysed by fitting an age-cohort model to the data. We addressed the potential modification of the effect of vitamin D availability by season of birth. The risk of fractures was increased among both girls and boys who were born before the vitamin D fortification terminated in 1985 (rate ratio (RR) exposed v. non-exposed girls: 1·15 (95 % CI 1·11, 1·20); RR exposed v. non-exposed boys: 1·11 (95 % CI 1·07, 1·14). However, these associations no longer persisted after including the period effects. There was no interaction between season of birth and vitamin D availability in relation to fracture risk. The study did not provide evidence that prenatal exposure to extra vitamin D from a mandatory fortification programme of 1·25 µg vitamin D/100 g margarine was sufficient to influence the risk of fractures in late childhood, regardless of season of birth. Replication studies are needed.
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Accepted/In Press date: 3 March 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 April 2017
Published date: 2017
Organisations:
Medical Research Council
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Local EPrints ID: 407842
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/407842
ISSN: 0007-1145
PURE UUID: 8a20e38c-b14e-40f8-a814-46417a9634c8
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Date deposited: 27 Apr 2017 01:02
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 05:11
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Author:
Mina N. Handel
Author:
Peder Frederiksen
Author:
Bo Abrahamsen
Author:
Berit Lilienthal Heitmann
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