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Determinants of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and its association with musculoskeletal health in midlife: findings from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study

Determinants of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and its association with musculoskeletal health in midlife: findings from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study
Determinants of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and its association with musculoskeletal health in midlife: findings from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study

Introduction

Several studies have reported the importance of vitamin D status to musculoskeletal health in populations of older adults. Here we report relationships between circulating serum 25(OH)D and musculoskeletal health in a community cohort of UK adults in midlife and investigate whether environmental (dietary intake, use of supplements) and/or genetic factors (4 SNPs previously related to vitamin D status) play more significant roles in determining vitamin D status in this population.

Methods

Participants were recruited from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study, an established longitudinal cohort study of community dwelling adults and were seen at baseline and follow up 9–12 years later. Lumbar spine and total femur BMD were measured at baseline using a Hologic QDR 4500 instrument. Osteoarthritis (OA) was defined by radiographs of the knees graded according to Kellgren & Lawrence at both time points. Serum 25(OH)D concentrations were measured using a DiaSorin Liaison chemiluminescent assay. Genotyping of 4 SNPs previously associated with 25(OH)D values were assessed: (rs12785878 (DHCR7), rs10741657 (CYP2R1) and rs6013897 (CYP24A1)) and a fourth SNP (rs4588), described as “a near-perfect proxy (i.e. substitute) for rs2282679 on the GC gene”.

Results

820 subjects (397 men, 423 women) participated at baseline, and 339 of these 820 subjects (164 men; 175 women) participated in a follow up study of OA progression. The median (IQR) age of participants at baseline was 64.0 (61.8–66.5) and 65.5 (63.3–67.6) for men and women respectively. Median circulating levels of 25(OH)D were 44.6 (35.0–63.0) nmol/L and 41.3 (29.8–53.5) nmol/L in men and women respectively. Circulating 25(OH)D was strongly associated with season of blood testing (p < 0.001). The greatest variance in a model of vitamin D status that included the four SNPs measured, season, and whether participants reported taking vitamin D supplements was explained by season of assay (17.9% men; 15.8% women). Higher femoral neck BMD was observed in men with higher baseline vitamin D status, after adjustment for age, season, BMI, smoker status, alcohol consumption, physical activity and social class (p = 0.01). Associations between 25(OH)D and BMD in women were not statistically significant in this population. There were no associations between circulating 25(OH)D and radiographic knee OA at either time point after adjustment for confounders and for duration of follow-up.

Conclusion

Circulating 25(OH)D levels were generally lower than is recommended in community dwelling adults in midlife, with marked seasonal variation observed, but relationships with reported vitamin D supplementation were weaker. Circulating 25(OH)D was directly associated with hip BMD in men but relationships with BMD in women and radiographic OA were not seen in this sample.


100143
Bevilacqua, Gregorio
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Laskou, Faidra
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Clynes, Michael A
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Jameson, Karen
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Boucher, Barbara J.
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Noonan, Kate
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Cooper, Cyrus
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Dennison, Elaine
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Bevilacqua, Gregorio
e93e3b18-7d1e-4da5-9fcd-e6b4637e1c2e
Laskou, Faidra
3959d6e2-ccfa-4d97-8311-16f27b893365
Clynes, Michael A
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Jameson, Karen
d5fb142d-06af-456e-9016-17497f94e9f2
Boucher, Barbara J.
de5e1d47-d10f-4c10-be36-8bb5f54361ff
Noonan, Kate
4767a496-870f-4131-908f-aab7b4e189c1
Cooper, Cyrus
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Dennison, Elaine
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1

Bevilacqua, Gregorio, Laskou, Faidra, Clynes, Michael A, Jameson, Karen, Boucher, Barbara J., Noonan, Kate, Cooper, Cyrus and Dennison, Elaine (2021) Determinants of circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration and its association with musculoskeletal health in midlife: findings from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study. Metabolism Open, 12, 100143, [100143]. (doi:10.1016/j.metop.2021.100143).

Record type: Article

Abstract


Introduction

Several studies have reported the importance of vitamin D status to musculoskeletal health in populations of older adults. Here we report relationships between circulating serum 25(OH)D and musculoskeletal health in a community cohort of UK adults in midlife and investigate whether environmental (dietary intake, use of supplements) and/or genetic factors (4 SNPs previously related to vitamin D status) play more significant roles in determining vitamin D status in this population.

Methods

Participants were recruited from the Hertfordshire Cohort Study, an established longitudinal cohort study of community dwelling adults and were seen at baseline and follow up 9–12 years later. Lumbar spine and total femur BMD were measured at baseline using a Hologic QDR 4500 instrument. Osteoarthritis (OA) was defined by radiographs of the knees graded according to Kellgren & Lawrence at both time points. Serum 25(OH)D concentrations were measured using a DiaSorin Liaison chemiluminescent assay. Genotyping of 4 SNPs previously associated with 25(OH)D values were assessed: (rs12785878 (DHCR7), rs10741657 (CYP2R1) and rs6013897 (CYP24A1)) and a fourth SNP (rs4588), described as “a near-perfect proxy (i.e. substitute) for rs2282679 on the GC gene”.

Results

820 subjects (397 men, 423 women) participated at baseline, and 339 of these 820 subjects (164 men; 175 women) participated in a follow up study of OA progression. The median (IQR) age of participants at baseline was 64.0 (61.8–66.5) and 65.5 (63.3–67.6) for men and women respectively. Median circulating levels of 25(OH)D were 44.6 (35.0–63.0) nmol/L and 41.3 (29.8–53.5) nmol/L in men and women respectively. Circulating 25(OH)D was strongly associated with season of blood testing (p < 0.001). The greatest variance in a model of vitamin D status that included the four SNPs measured, season, and whether participants reported taking vitamin D supplements was explained by season of assay (17.9% men; 15.8% women). Higher femoral neck BMD was observed in men with higher baseline vitamin D status, after adjustment for age, season, BMI, smoker status, alcohol consumption, physical activity and social class (p = 0.01). Associations between 25(OH)D and BMD in women were not statistically significant in this population. There were no associations between circulating 25(OH)D and radiographic knee OA at either time point after adjustment for confounders and for duration of follow-up.

Conclusion

Circulating 25(OH)D levels were generally lower than is recommended in community dwelling adults in midlife, with marked seasonal variation observed, but relationships with reported vitamin D supplementation were weaker. Circulating 25(OH)D was directly associated with hip BMD in men but relationships with BMD in women and radiographic OA were not seen in this sample.


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Open metabolism vitamin D MSK revised Oct 2021 clean - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 24 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 October 2021
Published date: December 2021
Additional Information: © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452534
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452534
PURE UUID: c9ee25d5-3c4b-46e3-89da-7198817f298f
ORCID for Gregorio Bevilacqua: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7819-1482
ORCID for Faidra Laskou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8481-6343
ORCID for Michael A Clynes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7597-7658
ORCID for Cyrus Cooper: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3510-0709
ORCID for Elaine Dennison: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3048-4961

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Date deposited: 11 Dec 2021 11:26
Last modified: 12 Nov 2024 05:05

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Contributors

Author: Gregorio Bevilacqua ORCID iD
Author: Faidra Laskou ORCID iD
Author: Karen Jameson
Author: Barbara J. Boucher
Author: Kate Noonan
Author: Cyrus Cooper ORCID iD
Author: Elaine Dennison ORCID iD

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