During recent years, a number of studies have been performed in human subjects to investigate the relative potencies of two commonly used forms of vitamin D, ergocalciferol (vitamin D2) and cholecalciferol (vitamin D3)(Reference Tjellesen, Hummer and Christiansen1–Reference Heaney, Recker and Grote10). Vitamin D3, the form produced in the skin of humans after exposure of 7-dehydrocholesterol to sunlight, is found either naturally in animal products such as fatty fish and cod-liver oil, or added as a fortificant to foods. Commercial production of vitamin D3 is performed by UV irradiation of 7-dehydrocholesterol extracted from the lanolin of sheep wool. Vitamin D2 is made either naturally or synthetically from the UV irradiation of ergosterol obtained from yeast, and added to foods. Structurally, vitamin D2 differs from vitamin D3 in that its side chain has an added methyl group on carbon 24 and an additional double bond between carbons 22 and 23. These structural differences, however, do not prevent the metabolic activation of the two forms. Before exerting their biological effects, both vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 must undergo 25-hydroxylation to form 25-hydroxyvitamin D2 (25(OH)D2) or 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25(OH)D3), respectively, followed by 1α-hydroxylation to produce the respective biologically active metabolites 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25(OH)2D).
With the use of appropriate assay systems to detect the 25(OH)D2 metabolite, several randomised trials using large oral dose preparations ranging from 1250 to 7500 μg (50 000–300 000 IU) have suggested that vitamin D2 is less effective in elevating or maintaining total serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels in healthy adults(Reference Armas, Hollis and Heaney3, Reference Romagnoli, Mascia and Cipriani6, Reference Binkley, Gemar and Engelke9, Reference Heaney, Recker and Grote10), whereas the few studies which have directly compared daily administered low-dose preparations of vitamin D3 and vitamin D2 have yielded inconsistent results(Reference Tjellesen, Hummer and Christiansen1, Reference Trang, Cole and Rubin2, Reference Holick, Biancuzzo and Chen5, Reference Glendenning, Chew and Seymour7–Reference Binkley, Gemar and Engelke9). In addition to varying dose and dosing regimens, these latter studies have been limited by short study duration (4–12 weeks), small participant numbers and have included confounding by other variables such as BMI and contribution of vitamin D3 from cutaneous production, fortified foods and supplemental sources.
In an attempt to address some of the limitations of previous research, we conducted a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the efficacy of a daily physiological dose of vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 in healthy-weight adults for a 25-week period beginning at the end of summer. We specifically investigated the time course of 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 serum levels and the concomitant variations in parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentration after a daily initiation of 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D2 or D3 supplementation. The study was conducted in New Zealand at a latitude of 46°S where food fortification of vitamin D is neither mandated nor common.
Methods
Participants
A total of ninety-five healthy, adult women and men aged 18–50 years, inclusive, were recruited from the staff and student population at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand (latitude 46°S), and from the community through advertisements in the local newspaper. This region has a temperate climate with a summer mean temperature of 14°C and a winter mean temperature of 5°C with mean sunshine hours in the winter ranging from 98 to 122 h/month(11). The nadir in UV radiation occurs midwinter (July) after the peak 6 months earlier in summer (December). Participants were excluded if they had a BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2, had reported granulomatous conditions, gastrointestinal disease, liver or kidney disease, or diabetes, were taking medications that might affect vitamin D metabolism (e.g. anticonvulsants, steroids in any form or barbiturates), or were planning to travel during the course of the study to a location at which the latitude would be expected to result in cutaneous synthesis of vitamin D.
Study design
The study was designed as a 24-week randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. At the baseline study visit, a non-fasting venous blood sample was collected and participants completed a brief self-administered sociodemographic and health questionnaire. They were asked to report the use of any vitamin D- and Ca-containing supplements over the past 3 months and current prescription medications (including oral contraceptives). Height was measured to the nearest 0·1 cm using a calibrated self-made stadiometer, and weight was measured to the nearest 0·1 kg using a calibrated platform digital scale (Seca). Lastly, participants were given detailed verbal and written instructions on how to collect diet records to assess dietary Ca intakes, and were asked to record all foods and beverages consumed for five weekdays and two weekend days within the next 14 d. Participants were then randomly assigned to receive one of three daily tablets labelled to contain 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D2, 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D3 or a placebo. The vitamin D and placebo supplements were manufactured as hard tablets by New Zealand Nutritionals Limited, and were identical in appearance. The tablet content was independently verified on 19 August 2009 (New Zealand Laboratory Services Limited), and the actual amounts labelled to provide 25 μg (1000 IU) of vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 were 32 μg (1295 IU) (CV 6 %) and 28 μg (1110 IU) (CV 6 %), respectively. Randomisation of participants was completed with a computer-generated block randomisation scheme stratified by sex. All the participants began the study between 6 March and 13 March 2009 (early autumn) and completed the study between 27 August and 14 September 2009 (late winter).
Participants were to return to the clinic at weeks 4, 8, 12 and 24 to provide non-fasting blood samples at a standard time in the day between 08.00 and 11.00 hours. The average number of days from baseline for each targeted study week was as follows: 4 weeks (28·3 d); 8 weeks (56·0 d); 12 weeks (92·3 d, equivalent to 13 weeks); 24 weeks (175 d, equivalent to 25 weeks). At each subsequent visit, participants were asked questions relating to the use of prescription medications and travel outside of the surrounding area since the last study visit. Measurements of height and weight were taken once again at the completion of the study. Compliance was assessed using cumulative pill counts at the end of the study. The blinding of the arms of the study was maintained for all researchers, including the statistician, until the final data analyses were completed. The present study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki, and all procedures involving human participants were approved by the Human Ethics Committee at the University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants. The study was registered at www.actr.org.au as ACTRN12609000273280.
Biochemical analyses
Serum 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 concentrations were determined by isotope dilution liquid chromatography–tandem MS on a API 3200 instrument (Applied Biosystems) according to the method of Maunsell et al. (Reference Maunsell, Wright and Rainbow12). The limit of quantification for the assay was < 5 nmol/l for both metabolites. Values for serum 25(OH)D reported as less than 5 nmol/l were considered to be zero. To assess accuracy and inter-assay variability, we prepared an internal quality control by adding 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 to a pooled serum sample and ran an external quality control serum material (UTAK Laboratories) with a verified 25(OH)D2 value of 24·2 nmol/l (mean 23·3 (sd 1·2) nmol/l; CV 5·2 %) and a 25(OH)D3 value of 27·5 nmol/l (mean 25·9 (sd 2·4) nmol/l; CV 9·3 %). For the internal quality control, the inter-assay CV for 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 were 3·8 % at 69·8 nmol/l and 4·5 % at 83·6 nmol/l, respectively. Intact PTH was measured by an automated electrochemiluminescence immunoassay (Elecsys 1010®; Roche Diagnostics). Manufacturer-provided controls (Elecsys PreciControl Bone 1, 2 and 3) were analysed with each reagent kit. The means and CV (%) for the three controls were 45·2 (sd 2·8) pg/ml and 6·1 %, 155·7 (sd 10·3) pg/ml and 6·6 %, and 650·7 (sd 33·5) pg/ml and 5·2 %, respectively, and were within the range of the results provided by the manufacturer. Serum samples from each subject (for all clinic visits) were analysed together in the same batch.
Statistical analysis
A per-protocol approach, which included all participants ≥ 90 % compliant with the study supplement, was used for all analyses. Additionally, an intent-to-treat analysis that included all randomly assigned subjects irrespective of compliance was performed. The intent-to-treat results were only slightly different from the per-protocol results and the differences were not clinically significant (see Table S1, available online). Therefore, only the per-protocol results are presented, unless noted otherwise.
The original study design included a sample size calculation based on a planned intention-to-treat analysis before the decision to examine the efficacy aspects of supplementation in the primary analysis reported herein. As such, there is no power analysis reported for the per-protocol study, and the power to detect practically important effect sizes is reflected in the widths of the CI included in the results.
The outcome variables were total serum 25(OH)D, 25(OH)D3 and PTH concentration. Mixed-effects linear regression models were used to evaluate the fixed effect of the intervention on total serum 25(OH)D, serum 25(OH)D3 and PTH including a random subject effect to account for the repeated measures within subjects and controlled for baseline levels. Models with PTH as an outcome variable also included dietary Ca. Natural log transformations were used where this improved residual normality and/or homoscedasticity. The difference in changes between the groups was assessed using combinations of treatment group effects and group × time interactions. Stata (version 11.0; Stata Corporation) was used for all analyses and a two-sided P< 0·05 was considered statistically significant in all cases.
Results
Of the ninety-five participants recruited and enrolled in the study, eighty-five completed the intervention trial (vitamin D3, thirty out of the thirty-two enrolled; vitamin D2, twenty-five out of thirty-one; placebo, thirty out of thirty-two). Reasons for discontinuing the intervention were as follows: lack of time (n 3); personal reason (n 1); unspecified health reasons (n 4); exacerbation of eczema (n 2). An additional twenty-four participants were excluded from the per-protocol analysis for compliance < 90 % (vitamin D3, n 6; vitamin D2, n 12; placebo, n 5) and compliance unknown (did not return pill bottle) (vitamin D3, n 1), resulting in a total of sixty-one participants who completed the study with known supplement compliance ≥ 90 %: 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D3/d, n 24, 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D2/d, n 13; placebo, n 25. At baseline, the mean age of participants included in the analysis was 29 years (range 18–50 years) and the majority of the participants were New Zealand Europeans (84 %), well educated with at least some tertiary education (89 %), and female (79 %). All of the participants were classified as normal weight (BMI 18–24·9 kg/m2) with a mean BMI of 22·7 (sd 2·3) kg/m2. Median dietary Ca intake (fifty-three out of sixty-one participants who completed baseline diet records) was 869 (25th and 75th percentile 696, 1029) mg/d. There were eight (14 %) participants who regularly took a Ca-containing supplement. There was no evidence of a significant difference in dietary Ca among the three groups (P= 0·98).
Total serum 25(OH)D concentrations (i.e. the sum of 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3) at baseline ranged from 40 to 136 nmol/l with the geometric mean serum total 25(OH)D of 80 (sd 18) nmol/l. There were three (5 %) participants who had 25(OH)D concentrations below 50 nmol/l. The concentration of 25(OH)D2 at baseline was below detectable limits ( < 5 nmol/l) for most participants. Mean serum PTH was 37·5 (sd 14·2) pg/ml. Secondary hyperparathyroidism, defined as a PTH concentration>65 pg/ml, was observed in four (7 %) of the sixty-one participants at baseline.
The time course of serum 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 is shown in Fig. 1, which presents the mean values at each sampling point. Supplementation with vitamin D2 increased serum 25(OH)D2, whereas participants who received vitamin D3 or placebo showed no significant change in serum 25(OH)D2 throughout the study. The mean absolute increase in serum 25(OH)D2 levels achieved per 25 μg vitamin D2 daily was 32 nmol/l. Serum 25(OH)D3 concentration significantly declined in the D2-supplemented group (53 (95 % CI 45, 61) nmol/l; P< 0·001) and placebo (44 (95 % CI 37, 51) nmol/l; P< 0·001) relative to D3. After adjustment for baseline, D2-supplemented participants experienced a 9 (95 % CI 1, 17) nmol/l greater decline in the 25(OH)D3 metabolite compared with placebo (P< 0·036).
The effect of vitamin D supplementation on total serum 25(OH)D concentrations (sum of 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3) over the 25-week intervention period is reported in Table 1. As expected, participants randomised to the placebo had a significant reduction in total serum 25(OH)D concentrations (sum of 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3) over the winter months compared with participants who received vitamin D3 and vitamin D2 (both P< 0·001) (Table 1). Total serum 25(OH)D concentrations were also significantly lower in participants receiving vitamin D2 compared with those receiving D3 (P< 0·001), among whom there was no change in total serum 25(OH)D (paired t test; P= 0·90) (Table 1). At the end of the study, 84 % (twenty-one out of twenty-five) and 15 % (two out of thirteen) of participants in the placebo and D2 groups, respectively, had total 25(OH)D concentrations < 50 nmol/l compared with only 9 % (two out of twenty-three) of participants in the D3 group. Despite the significant decrease in total 25(OH)D concentrations from baseline in the vitamin D2 and placebo groups, there was no evidence of significant intervention-related changes in serum PTH concentrations among the three groups (P= 0·81; Table 1). This model was repeated adjusting for dietary Ca with the same conclusion being reached (P= 0·77).
* Estimates were significantly different from the vitamin D3 group after adjustment for baseline concentration (P< 0·001).
† Estimates were significantly different from the vitamin D2 group after adjustment for baseline concentration (P< 0·001).
Discussion
The present results show that a daily intake of 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D3 is more effective than 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D2 in maintaining serum 25(OH)D concentration during the autumn and winter months. In New Zealand (latitude ranging from 35°S to 47°S), very few foods are fortified with vitamin D, and the relative contribution of dermal production of vitamin D3 is markedly diminished during the winter months. Of the unsupplemented (placebo) participants, 84 % had low vitamin D status ( < 50 nmol/l). To our knowledge, this is the first study comparing vitamin D3 and D2 by mapping the time course of serum 25(OH)D from the summertime peak through to the wintertime nadir. As expected, total serum 25(OH)D concentrations decreased substantially among the present study participants assigned to the placebo group over the course of the study, whereas a daily intake of 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D3 was efficacious in maintaining summertime serum 25(OH)D levels. In contrast, while participants assigned to the vitamin D2 group exhibited significantly higher total serum 25(OH)D levels than the placebo group, concentrations were 21 nmol/l lower (equivalent to 28 % of the baseline mean) at the end of the study relative to the vitamin D3 group. Furthermore, the greater fall in 25(OH)D3 levels observed in the D2-supplemented participants compared with placebo suggests a more rapid metabolism or clearance of circulating 25(OH)D3 following D2 supplementation, which may partly explain the inability of this form to maintain the total serum 25(OH)D levels.
Previous studies employing higher-dosage regimens ranging from 100 μg/d (4000 IU/d) to a single dose of 7500 μg (300 000 IU) have consistently reported a substantial discrimination in favour of vitamin D3(Reference Tjellesen, Hummer and Christiansen1–Reference Armas, Hollis and Heaney3, Reference Romagnoli, Mascia and Cipriani6, Reference Glendenning, Chew and Seymour7, Reference Binkley, Gemar and Engelke9, Reference Heaney, Recker and Grote10), while limited evidence generated from studies using lower physiological daily doses have argued that D2 and D3 are essentially equivalent(Reference Holick, Biancuzzo and Chen5, Reference Biancuzzo, Young and Bibuld8). Holick et al. (Reference Holick, Biancuzzo and Chen5) provided the first published evidence of the effective equivalence of the two forms in human subjects in a randomised, placebo-controlled trial demonstrating that serum 25(OH)D levels increased to the same extent in participants receiving 25 μg (1000 IU) daily as vitamin D2, vitamin D3 or a combination of 12·5 μg (500 IU) vitamin D2 and 12·5 μg (500 IU) vitamin D3. These findings suggested that the pharmacokinetic parameters of vitamin D2 and vitamin D3 change with increasing dose such that low doses of D2 and D3 appear equivalent while higher doses of D2 are less effective than D3. However, Heaney et al. (Reference Heaney, Recker and Grote10) have argued that at lower doses, the increase in serum 25(OH)D would be relatively small and thus not sufficient to allow detection of differences between the two forms due to the combined effects of analytical and biological variability of serum 25(OH)D. Participants in Holick's study(Reference Holick, Biancuzzo and Chen5) were generally obese (mean BMI 30 kg/m2), which may have an effect on the outcome measure of total serum 25(OH)D, and nearly 40 % (six out of sixteen) of the participants assigned to the D2 group were taking a 10 μg (400 IU) vitamin D3-containing supplement during the time period of the study. We sought to avoid the effects of potential predictors in the present study by excluding participants with a BMI greater than or equal to 25 kg/m2 and prohibiting the use of vitamin D-containing supplements during the study. Although we did not measure background dietary vitamin D intakes from food sources, the absence of widespread fortification of food with vitamin D in New Zealand makes it unlikely that the present results were confounded by dietary intake from fortified food sources. Moreover, the serum 25(OH)D assay detection limit of 10 nmol/l in Holick's study was high, and values for serum 25(OH)D2 less than 10 nmol/l were obtained by subtracting 25(OH)D3 from the total 25(OH)D. This method employed to quantify serum 25(OH)D2 levels may have led to an overestimation of actual concentrations. In contrast, our assay was more sensitive with a non-detectable serum 25(OH)D2 level of less than 5 nmol/l. We also conservatively assumed a value of zero for any 25(OH)D reported as < 5 nmol/l.
More recently, Binkley et al. (Reference Binkley, Gemar and Engelke9) evaluated daily administration of 40 μg (1600 IU) of vitamin D2 and D3 and concluded that vitamin D3 was significantly more effective than D2 on the basis of a greater absolute increase in serum 25(OH)D levels for those participants treated with vitamin D3 (23 nmol/l) compared with D2 (15 nmol/l). However, mean baseline 25(OH)D levels in the D2 participants in the present study were higher than the D3 participants, and there was no evidence of a significant difference in mean 25(OH)D levels after 12 months of intervention (97·5 nmol/l in the D3 group when compared with 95·3 nmol/l in the D2 group). The present study is therefore the first intervention, to our knowledge, to clearly demonstrate that long-term administration of a daily physiological dose of D3 produces a substantially larger effect than D2 in a healthy adult population. The more rapid metabolism of vitamin D2 than D3 could reflect the lower affinity of serum 25(OH)D2 for vitamin D-binding protein than 25(OH)D3 (i.e. shorter circulating half-life) and/or the increased affinity of 25(OH)D2 for the 24-hydroxylase enzyme (i.e. greater rate of catabolism)(Reference Hollis13, Reference Thacher, Fischer and Obadofin14). Furthermore, the present findings of a greater decline in serum 25(OH)D3 levels in the D2-treated participants than in the placebo group have also been previously reported in other studies ranging from 25 μg (1000 IU)/d to 1250 μg (50 000 IU) single and weekly dose regimens(Reference Armas, Hollis and Heaney3, Reference Glendenning, Chew and Seymour7, Reference Heaney, Recker and Grote10). It has been proposed that an up-regulation in mechanisms required to metabolise vitamin D2 and its metabolites may increase the metabolic degradation of circulating 25(OH)D3 levels(Reference Armas, Hollis and Heaney3).
Despite the differential response of serum 25(OH)D to vitamin D2 and D3, there was no evidence of a difference in PTH concentrations between the treatment groups, which raises the more important question of whether the ingestion of D2v. D3 makes any functional difference. We did not measure the active form of vitamin D, 1,25(OH)2D, and thus it is not known whether the lower level of circulating 25(OH)D observed in our D2-treated participants would result in lower production of the dihydroxylated form. The kidney is the major site of production of 1,25(OH)2D, and adequate production of this metabolite is dependent on the level of the serum 25(OH)D precursor and the 25(OH)D-1-α-hydroxylase or cytochrome P27B1 (CYP27B1) enzyme, which converts 25(OH)D to 1,25(OH)2D(Reference Henry, Feldman, Wesley-Pike and Glorieux15, Reference Morris and Anderson16). The expression of renal CYP27B1 is tightly regulated and plays an essential role in maintaining Ca and phosphate homeostasis. When serum 25(OH)D levels fall, there is a rise in PTH, which stimulates CYP27B1 enzyme activity(Reference Henry, Feldman, Wesley-Pike and Glorieux15). Given the strong interdependence of vitamin D and Ca, it is likely that the relatively high dietary Ca intakes in the present study population may have suppressed the rise in serum PTH that typically accompanies declining 25(OH)D concentrations(Reference Weaver and Fleet17–Reference Seamans and Cashman19). As a result, renal synthesis of 1,25(OH)2D may not be increased appropriately. Although knowledge of the regulation of CYP27B1 expression in extra-renal tissues such as skeletal muscle, liver and lung is limited, the tissue-specific synthesis of 1,25(OH)2D2 appears to be directly related to the availability of the 25(OH)D precursor for CYP27B1, and thus low circulating 25(OH)D may lead to an earlier decline in local v. circulating levels of 1,25(OH)2D(Reference Morris and Anderson16). We did not specifically address these outcomes in the present study, but further investigation in this area is warranted.
The relatively higher attrition rate and failure to sufficiently achieve 90 % or greater self-reported compliance in participants assigned to the vitamin D2 group compared with those assigned to the D3 or placebo group (χ2 test, P= 0·011) is a potential limitation. However, there appears to be no reasonable explanation for the significant difference in loss across the groups. The study was double-blinded (investigators and participants), allocation was concealed, all tablets were indistinguishable and there were no reports of adverse events. Given that the per-protocol analyses conveyed similar results to the intention-to-treat analyses, we assume that the potential bias from non-random dropout of participants or exclusion for poor compliance had no major impact on the results.
The Food and Nutrition Board of the Institute of Medicine has recommended 10 μg (400 IU) vitamin D daily to meet the needs of half of adults up to the age of 70 years, and 15 μg (600 IU) daily to meet the needs of 97·5 % of these adults(20). In the present study, a daily intake of 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D3 maintained the summer 25(OH)D levels. Using data from controlled trials, a regression analysis of the relationship between the serum 25(OH)D level and the total intake of vitamin D predicts that a daily intake of 25 μg (1000 IU) would be associated with a mean serum 25(OH)D level of 68 nmol/l (y= 9·9 ln(total vitamin D intake in IU/d))(20), where 40 IU vitamin D is equal to 1 μg vitamin D. The predicted level is noticeably less than the present study's mean total serum 25(OH)D level of 80 nmol/l achieved after 25 weeks supplementation in the D3-treated participants; however, it should be noted that the simulated intake–response relationship has been determined under conditions of minimal sun exposure, which may not be fully met at latitudes below 49°(20). In contrast, the predicted value is substantially higher than the mean total serum 25(OH)D level of 56 nmol/l observed in our D2 participants at the end of the study. Neither the simulated intake–response relationship nor the newly revised Dietary Reference Intake (DRI) distinguish between vitamin D2 and vitamin D3.
In conclusion, daily supplementation of 25 μg (1000 IU) vitamin D3 over a 25-week intervention period was more effective than vitamin D2 in maintaining serum 25(OH)D levels. These findings contribute to the accumulating evidence that vitamin D3 and vitamin D2 have different pharmacokinetic profiles for serum 25(OH)D. As a result, care should be taken to distinguish the form of vitamin D used for both clinical studies and therapeutic use, particularly given that the dose employed in the present study is commonly used in over-the-counter dietary supplements. Nonetheless, conclusions about the biological significance of the different functional effects of the two forms cannot be drawn. Additional studies are needed to determine whether even lower doses would also suggest differences in pharmacokinetic parameters between vitamin D2 and vitamin D3.
Supplementary material
To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114512002851
Acknowledgements
The study was funded by the University of Otago Medical Research Fund, Laurenson Grant. We thank both the participants who took part in the study, and research nurse Margaret Waldron for blood collection. L. A. H. designed the study; M. C. P., V. F. L and M. J. H. conducted the research; A. R. G., L. A. H. and V. F. L. analysed the data; L. A. H. and V. F. L. wrote the paper; L. A. H. had primary responsibility for the final content. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. None of the authors had a conflict of interest.