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Vitamin D status of Irish adults: findings from the National Adult Nutrition Survey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 2012

Kevin D. Cashman*
Affiliation:
School of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland Department of Medicine, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland
Siobhan Muldowney
Affiliation:
School of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland
Breige McNulty
Affiliation:
UCD Institute of Food and Health, University College Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Anne Nugent
Affiliation:
UCD Institute of Food and Health, University College Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Anthony P. FitzGerald
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland Department of Statistics, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland
Mairead Kiely
Affiliation:
School of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland
Janette Walton
Affiliation:
School of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland
Michael J. Gibney
Affiliation:
UCD Institute of Food and Health, University College Dublin, Dublin, Republic of Ireland
Albert Flynn
Affiliation:
School of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Republic of Ireland
*
*Corresponding author: Professor K. D. Cashman, fax +353 21 4270244, E-mail: [email protected]
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Abstract

Previous national nutrition surveys in Irish adults did not include blood samples; thus, representative serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) data are lacking. In the present study, we characterised serum 25(OH)D concentrations in Irish adults from the recent National Adult Nutrition Survey, and determined the impact of vitamin D supplement use and season on serum 25(OH)D concentrations. Of the total representative sample (n 1500, aged 18+ years), blood samples were available for 1132 adults. Serum 25(OH)D was measured via immunoassay. Vitamin D-containing supplement use was assessed by questionnaire and food diary. Concentrations of serum 25(OH)D were compared by season and in supplement users and non-users. Year-round prevalence rates for serum 25(OH)D concentration < 30, < 40, < 50 and < 75 nmol/l were 6·7, 21·9, 40·1 and 75·6 %, respectively (11·1, 31·1, 55·0 and 84·0 % in winter, respectively). Supplement users had significantly higher serum 25(OH)D concentrations compared to non-users. However, 7·5 % of users had winter serum 25(OH)D < 30 nmol/l. Only 1·3 % had serum 25(OH)D concentrations >125 nmol/l. These first nationally representative serum 25(OH)D data for Irish adults show that while only 6·7 % had serum 25(OH)D < 30 nmol/l (vitamin D deficiency) throughout the year, 40·1 % had levels considered by the Institute of Medicine as being inadequate for bone health. These prevalence estimates were much higher during winter time. While vitamin D supplement use has benefits in terms of vitamin D status, at present rates of usage (17·5 % of Irish adults), it will have only very limited impact at a population level. Food-based strategies, including fortified foods, need to be explored.

Type
Full Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2012

Vitamin D, through its active form (1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D), is essential for intestinal Ca absorption and plays a central role in maintaining Ca homoeostasis and skeletal integrity(1). There is a consensus that serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) should be used to assess vitamin D status, as it reflects combined dietary supply and dermal production upon exposure to UV blue (UVB) sunlight(Reference Cashman2). Notwithstanding the importance of on-going discussions with respect to thresholds for serum 25(OH)D that represent adequacy/insufficiency, there is widespread acknowledgement of the presence of vitamin D deficiency in the community and the pressing need to address this deficiency(Reference Cashman and Kiely3).

Taking indicators of bone health, including rickets and osteomalacia, bone mineral density and Ca absorption, for which there was sufficient evidence to provide a reasonable and supportable basis for dietary reference intake (DRI) development, the North American Institute of Medicine (IOM)’s DRI committee for Ca and vitamin D proposed a serum 25(OH)D concentration of 40 nmol/l as the median value above which approximately half the population might meet its vitamin D requirement (and below which half might not) and 50 nmol/l as its estimate of the serum 25(OH)D concentration that would meet the requirement of nearly all (i.e. 97·5 %) normal healthy persons(4). These serum 25(OH)D concentrations were used to specify estimated average requirement (EAR) values for vitamin D intakes of 400 IU/d (10·0 μg/d) in all age and sex sub-groups in the population for more than 1 year, assuming minimal UVB sunlight exposure, and from which RDA values were derived for application to individuals (600 and 800 IU/d (15·0 and 20·0 μg/d) of vitamin D for those aged 1–70 and 70+ years, respectively). Furthermore, the DRI committee suggested that persons are at risk of deficiency when serum 25(OH)D concentrations are < 30 nmol/l and that there may be some reason for concern at serum concentrations >125 nmol/l(4).

While the National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey (NHANES) in the USA(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5) and the Canadian Health Measures Survey(Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) have provided useful descriptions of vitamin D status in North America, equivalent data for the European Union are of variable quality, making it difficult to estimate the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency across member states. Knowledge of the distributions of serum 25(OH)D concentrations and vitamin D intakes (and their contributory food sources) in the nationally representative populations is critical for the quantification of vitamin D deficiency in the European Union population as well as for devising food-based strategies for its prevention(Reference Cashman and Kiely3). The importance of vitamin D nutritional status and the need to monitor it within populations was highlighted well over a decade ago by the European Commission in its Report on Osteoporosis in the European Community: Action for Prevention(7).

As Ireland resides at the latitude band of 51–55°N, there are about 5 months during which UVB-induced dermal synthesis of vitamin D will not occur(Reference Webb, Kline and Holick8, Reference Webb and Engelsen9). While there have been two previous representative surveys of food consumption at the individual level in Irish adults (in 1990(10) and 1997–1999(11)), and thus estimates for habitual intake of vitamin D exist, only the recent National Adult Nutrition Survey (NANS) included blood samples for the analysis of nutritional status as well as collection of data on food and supplement consumption and nutrient intakes(12). To date, data on serum 25(OH)D concentrations in healthy Irish adults have come from relatively small cross-sectional as well as intervention studies(Reference Lardner, Fitzgibbon and Wilson13Reference McKenna, Freaney and Meade21).

Following a key recommendation in the 1998 European Commission Osteoporosis Report(7) in relation to Ca and vitamin D education of the general public and health professionals, there has been some progress on such awareness campaigns in Ireland(22). Whiting et al. (Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) recently showed that vitamin D supplement use in Canadians was associated with higher serum 25(OH)D concentrations as well as an attenuated effect of season on vitamin D status. Therefore, the aims of the present study were first, to characterise serum 25(OH)D concentration in the NANS participants, and second, to explore the impact of vitamin D supplement use on achieving serum 25(OH)D above cut-offs proposed by the DRI committee in these adults stratified by age, sex and season of sampling.

Subjects and methods

Subject sampling and recruitment procedures and methods of data collection

A detailed description of the methodology used in the NANS has been reported elsewhere(12). However, a concise overview of salient aspects of subject sampling and recruitment procedures, as well as methods of data collection and laboratory analysis pertinent to the objectives of the present work, are outlined later.

Ethics approval

The study was approved by the Clinical Research Ethics Committee of the Cork Teaching Hospitals, University College Cork and the Human Ethics Research Committee of University College Dublin.

Sampling procedure, inclusion/exclusion criteria and sample recruitment

The fieldwork phase of the NANS was carried out between October 2008 and April 2010, providing a seasonal balance to the data and biological sample collection. To achieve a nationally representative sample of community-dwelling adults aged 18 years and over, a quota sampling approach was adopted using data from the most recently published census(Reference Kiely, Flynn and Harrington23). Criteria used to achieve the quota sample were sex (50:50) within each age group (18–35 years (35 %), 36–50 years (29 %), 51–64 years (21 %) and ≥ 65 years (15 %)). As the Republic of Ireland does not have a national identification system for adults, a database of names and addresses held by Data Ireland (National Postal Service) was used to randomly select persons in twenty geographical clusters across the country, selected to provide proportional representation across the urban–rural continuum by distinguishing cities from towns, villages and open countryside.

A sample of 1500 free-living adults to represent a population of 4·239 million people participated in the dietary survey. The sample size was chosen to deliver at least 100 individuals in the least populated age and sex sub-groups. There were few exclusion criteria, other than pregnancy/lactation and inability to complete the survey due to disability, as described previously(24). An introductory letter plus an information leaflet were posted to each person selected from the database. Shortly after this mail contact, a researcher called to each potential respondent's home to introduce the survey and invite participation. If the person agreed to participate, a consent form was signed and the study protocol commenced. If the person was not at home, the researcher called on three more occasions on different days and at different times, before excluding them as non-contactable. If the person declined to participate in the survey, the researcher attempted to obtain information such as age, education and occupation, in order to describe non-respondents. All eligible and willing participants gave their written consent according to the Helsinki declaration.

The final response rate for the survey was 59·6 %. Analysis of the demographic features in this sample has shown it to be a representative sample of Irish adults with respect to age, sex, social class and geographical location when compared to census data(Reference Kiely, Flynn and Harrington23). Participation in the survey did not require provision of a blood sample. Of those that completed the 4 d food diary, 75·5 % of respondents (n 1132) provided a blood sample (of which 79 % were fasting). The following were the reasons why about one-quarter of the entire sample did not supply a blood sample: time constraints, lack of interest in this aspect, fear of needles, unsuccessful attempt or illness. The demographic features of the group of participants who provided a blood sample and those in the entire sample are shown in Table S1 (available online).

Food intake data collection, food quantification and estimation of nutrient intake

A 4 d food diary was used to collect food and beverage intake data, as described in detail elsewhere(12). A quantification protocol that had been established by the Irish Universities Nutrition Alliance for the North/South Ireland Food Consumption Survey (in 1997–99(11)), and described in detail elsewhere(Reference Harrington, Robson and Kiely25), was updated for the NANS. Food intake data were analysed using WISP© (Tinuviel Software), which uses data from McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods, sixth and fifth editions plus all nine supplemental volumes to generate nutrient intake data, as described elsewhere(12, Reference Hill, O'Brien and Cashman26). Modifications were made to the food composition database to include recipes of composite dishes, nutritional supplements, generic Irish foods that were commonly consumed and new-foods on the market, including vitamin D-fortified foods(Reference Black, Ireland and Møller27).

Participant questionnaires and anthropometry

All participants completed questionnaires which collected information on the respondent's socio-demographics, education levels, attitudes to their own diet and weight and supplement usage, as described in detail elsewhere(12). Information on social class and education level, smoking status, alcohol intake and medication usage (including those which contained nutrients) was also collected. Seasonality was based on the date the respondents provided the blood sample – November to March (representing the ‘winter’ period) or April to October (representing the ‘summer’ period) – consistent with studies based on NHANES(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5) and the recent analysis of Canadian Health Measures Survey for vitamin D status(Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6). Anthropometric measures including height, weight, waist and hip circumference and measures of body composition were taken in the respondent's homes, as described previously(12).

Assessment of vitamin D-containing supplement consumption

Present supplement use was assessed by the respondents’ answer to the question ‘Do you take any vitamin, mineral or food supplements?’, which was included in the self-administered health and lifestyle questionnaire. Respondents also entered each supplement, as it was consumed, into the 4 d food diary. Researchers checked that respondents who had reported using supplements in the questionnaire, which was administered at the start of the recording period, entered the supplements into the food diary when they were consumed. Information on product brand name, nutrient composition, as well as daily dose and frequency of consumption was obtained for each supplement taken. Researchers entered supplements into the food consumption database in the same way as they entered foods from the 4 d diaries. In this way, supplement consumption was measured alongside food consumption. By accounting for contribution of vitamin D from supplemental forms, the vitamin D intake data from all sources (food and supplements) as well as from food sources only were generated.

Blood collection and analysis of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D

Blood samples were collected by venepuncture into a vacutainer tube by a qualified nurse at designated centres within the survey area or in the respondent's home if the respondent could not travel. Blood samples were transported to the laboratory for further processing and serum was stored at − 80°C until required for analysis. The 25(OH)D concentrations were measured at University College Cork in all serum samples using an ELISA (OCTEIA® 25-Hydroxy Vitamin D, Immuno Diagnostic Systems Limited). The intra- and inter-assay CV for the ELISA method was 5·9 and 6·6 %, respectively. This ELISA assay is used for the quantitative determination of serum/plasma 25(OH)D; further details have been described previously(Reference Cashman, Hill and Cotter28). The quality and accuracy of serum 25(OH)D analysis in our laboratory are assured on an ongoing basis by participation in the Vitamin D External Quality Assessment Scheme (DEQAS, Charing Cross Hospital, London, UK). A comparison of the performance of the present ELISA assay with that of liquid chromatography–MS in relation to DEQAS (n 20) samples for 2008 shows a high correlation (ELISA = 1·0258 × liquid chromatography–MS = 3·0351; r 0·96). Measured serum 25(OH)D concentrations were compared with cut-offs for 25(OH)D as per the IOM DRI committee's recent definitions: persons are at risk of deficiency at serum 25(OH)D concentrations below 30 nmol/l, and 40 and 50 nmol/l are consistent with the EAR-like and RDA-like serum values, respectively(4). In addition, serum 25(OH)D concentrations >125 nmol/l have been suggested by the IOM DRI committee as being possibly some reason for concern(4). As the Task Force for the Clinical Guidelines Subcommittee of The Endocrine Society have recently suggested that to maximise the effect of vitamin D on Ca, bone and muscle metabolism, serum 25(OH)D concentration should exceed 75 nmol/l(Reference Holick, Binkley and Bischoff-Ferrari29), we also used this cut-off for comparison purposes.

Comparison of the mathematically modelled seasonal variation in serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D due to sun exposure with observed data from the National Adult Nutrition Survey

Diffey(Reference Diffey30) recently published a mathematical model which predicts the changes in serum 25(OH)D concentration arising from exposure to UVB sunlight over the course of twelve calendar months. The model uses estimates and data on response of serum 25(OH)D following a specified exposure to UVB sunshine (accounting for synthesis and decay rates for serum 25(OH)D) and incorporates UK data on daylight hours, annual standard erythema dose (standardised measure of erythemogenic UV radiation (representative of the South of England)), as well as hours spent outside per d. We used Diffey's model, but substituted Irish data for mean hours of sunlight in Ireland. We also made two broad assumptions in using Diffey's model and some of his estimates: as most of the Republic of Ireland (coverage area for the NANS) resides between approximately 51 and 54°N, we used the UK standard erythema dose data which was representative for the South of England (as standard erythema dose data is not available for Ireland), and as the NANS survey did not assess the average time spent outdoors, we used the estimates from the UK adult data of Hyppönen & Power(Reference Hyppönen and Power31), as per Diffey(Reference Diffey30).

Data manipulation and statistical analysis

Data manipulation was conducted using SPSS© version 15.0 for Windows™ (SPSS, Inc.). The χ2 analyses were performed to compare demographic data for the entire NANS sample (n 1500) and those NANS participants who provided a blood sample (n 1132). Descriptive statistics (frequencies, means) were used to estimate serum 25(OH)D concentrations by threshold, supplement use, age group, sex and season of blood sample collection. All estimates were based on data weighted to represent the Irish adult population aged 18–84 years(Reference Kiely, Flynn and Harrington23). Variance estimates (95 % CI) were calculated, and unpaired t tests were used to test differences between prevalence and mean estimates of serum 25(OH)D and mean daily vitamin D intakes. Statistical significance was defined as P< 0·05.

Results

There was no significant difference in key demographic characteristics among the entire NANS sample (n 1500) and the subset of NANS participants who provided a blood sample (n 1132; see Table S1; available online).

Essentially all (99·5 %) the NANS adults in the present analysis (n 1132) were self-reported Caucasians, and because of the extremely small sample size of either self-reported non-Caucasians (n 3) or those that did not specify their ethnicity (n 3), these were not treated separately in the analyses. As fasting v. non-fasting blood sample was not a significant determinant (P= 0·886) of serum 25(OH)D concentration after accounting for age, sex and month of sampling, all serum 25(OH)D data were included in the analyses.

The mean serum 25(OH)D concentration in Irish adults (n 1132) sampled throughout the year was 60·0 (95 % CI 58·6, 61·4) nmol/l. The 2·5th, 5th, 10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th, 95th and 97·5th percentile of year-round serum 25(OH)D were 26·0, 28·5, 32·3, 41·5, 57·2, 74·3, 92·0, 102·0 and 111·8 nmol/l, respectively. The mean serum 25(OH)D concentration in summer (n 632) and winter (n 500) was 65·5 (95 % CI 63·6, 67·4) nmol/l and 53·1 (95 % CI 51·2, 55·1) nmol/l, respectively (P< 0·0001). The mean daily intake of vitamin D from food sources only and from all sources (food and supplements) of the Irish adults (n 1132) was 160 (95 % CI 153, 166) and 219 (95 % CI 201, 237) IU/d (4·0 (95 % CI 3·8, 4·2) and 5·5 (5·0, 5·9) μg/d), and did not differ by season (P= 0·518 and P= 0·494 for all sources and food sources only, respectively), accounting for age and sex (data not shown).

The impact of UVB sun exposure on predicted serum 25(OH)D concentrations from March to September (representing a period when vitamin D status should rise from its nadir to close to its peak(Reference Webb, Kline and Holick8, Reference Webb and Engelsen9)) is shown in Fig. 1. The observed mean monthly serum 25(OH)D concentrations for this period in those NANS participants not taking a vitamin D-containing supplement (and thus relying on dietary and dermal sources) aligned closely with predicted values arising from Diffey's mathematical model(Reference Diffey30), which assumes a constant input of vitamin D from non-dermal sources (i.e. diet and possibly stores). The difference between mean observed serum 25(OH)D concentrations in those sampled in March and September was 32 nmol/l, and the corresponding average difference was 36 nmol/l using the predicted values from the model arising from increased dermal synthesis of vitamin D on exposure to UVB sunlight from March to September.

Fig. 1 Modelled variation in serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) from March to September for the Republic of Ireland (solid curve) using Diffey's model(Reference Diffey30) and the mean (sd) monthly measured serum 25(OH)D concentrations (data points with error bars) for adults in the National Adult Nutrition Survey. (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn)

The prevalence rates for serum 25(OH)D concentration below the IOM DRI committee thresholds, stratified by season and sex (where sample number allowed for meaningful comparisons), are shown in Table 1. Year-round prevalence rates for serum 25(OH)D concentration < 30, < 40 and < 50 nmol/l were 6·7, 21·9 and 40·1 %, respectively (Table 1). The prevalence of vitamin D deficiency (serum 25(OH)D < 30 nmol/l) was 11·1 % in the total group of adults in winter, and with no difference between those aged 18–64 years and >65 years (data not shown). This dropped to 3·4 % in summer. For serum 25(OH)D < 40 nmol/l (the EAR-like concentration), prevalence estimates more than doubled from 15·4 % in summer to 31·1 % in winter. For serum 25(OH)D < 50 nmol/l (the RDA-like concentration), estimates ranged from 21·5 % (in those aged 51–64 years old in summer) to 58·7 % (in those aged 36–50 years in winter). Even in summer, when status would be at its best for most people, between 21·5 and 35·8 % had serum 25(OH)D concentrations < 50 nmol/l (Table 1). The prevalence of serum 25(OH)D < 50 nmol/l in winter was lowest in the 65+ years age category (48·1 %) compared to younger age categories (54·4–58·7 %), but this trend was reversed in summer with the highest prevalence in the 65+ years olds (35·8 %; Table 1). Year-round, winter and summer prevalence rates for serum 25(OH)D concentration < 75 nmol/l in the entire cohort of Irish adults (n 1132) were 75·6, 84·0 and 69·0 %, respectively.

Table 1 Distribution of subjects by serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentration, season and sex in the National Adult Nutrition Survey of adults aged 18–84 years in Ireland, 2008–10* (Number of subjects, percentages and 95 % confidence intervals)

* There was a significant difference between winter and summer for all age and sex categories (P< 0·01).

There were no significant differences between males and females (P>0·1 in all cases; unpaired t test).

Division into age groupings only possible for serum 25(OH)D < 50 nmol/l, as base numbers too low for other two serum 25(OH)D categories.

For each of the IOM DRI committee serum 25(OH)D cut-offs used in the present analysis ( < 30, < 40 and < 50 nmol/l), the differences in prevalence estimates between winter and summer (significant in all cases) were of a much greater magnitude (1·9–3·2 times higher in winter, for all adults) compared to differences in prevalence estimates between sexes within a season (typically less than 20 %, and non-significant differences in all cases; Table 1).

A total of fifteen persons (eight men and seven women; 1·3 %) had serum 25(OH)D concentrations >125 nmol/l, a serum threshold which according to the DRI committee may be some reason for concern(4). Of these, eleven were sampled in summer and of the four that were sampled in winter, two were supplement users (667 and 2000 IU/d (16·7 and 50·0 μg/d), respectively) and one of the two non-users had been on a sun vacation before sampling.

Of the entire cohort of Irish adults aged 18–84 years, 17·5 % were taking a vitamin D-containing supplement. Vitamin D-containing supplement use was higher in women (55·6 %) than men (44·4 %), and in older (>65 years; 27·6 %) than younger adults (18–65 years; 16·0 %). The median (min, max) content of the vitamin D-containing supplements was 200 (10, 2412) IU (5·0 (0·25, 60·3) μg) vitamin D. Among the supplement users, 67·2 and 15·1 % took ≤ 200 IU/d (5·0 μg/d) and between 200 and ≤ 400 IU/d (5·0 and ≤ 10·0 μg/d) as supplemental vitamin D, respectively. Only a small percentage (3·5 %) of the total population had supplemental intakes of vitamin D ≥ 1000 IU/d (25·0 μg/d) and these were mostly aged >50 years, and mostly female (data not shown).

The association between vitamin D-containing supplement use and serum 25(OH)D concentration by season was also examined (Table 2). Seasonal differences in mean serum 25(OH)D concentration were evident in supplement non-users but not in supplement users. For example, the change in mean serum 25(OH)D with seasonality (summer less winter) was 13·9 nmol/l in supplement non-users and 5·1 nmol/l in users. Overall, in both winter and summer, supplement users had higher serum 25(OH)D concentrations than did non-users. Interestingly, the mean winter serum 25(OH)D concentration in vitamin D-containing supplement users (66·1 nmol/l) was similar to that achieved by non-users in summer (64·3 nmol/l, P>0·1; Table 2). The mean daily intake of vitamin D from food sources only did not differ between supplement users and non-users in either season after accounting for age and sex (P>0·2; data not shown).

Table 2 Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentration by vitamin D-containing supplement use, season, sex and age group in subjects in the National Adult Nutrition Survey of adults aged 18–84 years in Ireland, 2008–2010 (Mean values, number of subjects and 95 % confidence intervals)

* Mean values were significantly different from no supplement use within same season (P< 0·05; unpaired ttest).

Mean values were significantly different from no supplement use in winter (P< 0·001; unpaired ttest).

Mean values were significantly different from supplement use in winter (P< 0·05; unpaired ttest); there was no significant difference between summer and winter for supplement users (P>0·1 in all cases).

Prevalence of serum 25(OH)D concentration below 30, 40 and 50 nmol/l for year-round and winter only, and stratified by supplement use, are shown in Table 3. In general, the highest prevalence of low status (less than 30, 40 and 50 nmol/l) was in non-users in winter, and supplement use was associated with lower prevalence estimates during winter, irrespective of which threshold of serum 25(OH)D was used. However, caution is warranted as the numbers in some of the sub-groups are quite low.

Table 3 Distribution of subjects taking a vitamin D-containing supplement, by serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations and sex in subjects in the National Adult Nutrition Survey of adults aged 18–84 years in Ireland, 2008–10* (Number of subjects, percentages and 95 % confidence intervals)

* There were no significant differences between males and females (P>0·1 in all cases; unpaired t test).

Significantly different from no supplement use (P< 0·05; unpaired t test).

Interpret with caution due to the base number ≤ 5.

§ Statistical analysis not performed due to the small sample size.

When the total group of adults was stratified into those with habitual vitamin D intakes (irrespective of whether from food alone or food plus supplements) above and below the IOM dietary EAR for vitamin D (400 IU/d (10·0 μg/d)(4)), the prevalence of serum 25(OH) ≥ 40 nmol/l was much higher (81 %) in those reaching the EAR than in those failing to meet this target (67 %) in winter.

Discussion

Vitamin D status in populations living at latitudes above 40°N is at its lowest in the winter period, during which the capacity for UVB sunlight-induced dermal synthesis of vitamin D is much reduced and even absent(Reference Webb, Kline and Holick8, Reference Webb and Engelsen9). In the present study, the prevalence of serum 25(OH)D concentration < 30 nmol/l (the IOM threshold for vitamin D deficiency(4)) during winter was 11·1 % compared to 3·4 % during summer. This seasonal difference was also evident in prevalence estimates of serum 25(OH)D below the IOM DRI committee's thresholds of 40 and 50 nmol/l, which relate to covering needs of vitamin D in half and nearly all (97·5 %) of the general healthy population, respectively(4). Overall, the year-round prevalence estimates of serum 25(OH)D < 30 and < 50 nmol/l in Irish adults (6·7 and 40·1 %, respectively) agree well with those of the US adults aged >19 years in NHANES 2001–2006 (9·1 and 34·9 %, respectively)(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5), but while the later survey included a multi-ethnic population sample, the NANS was overwhelmingly Caucasian. Non-whites in NHANES had three to approximately ten times higher year-round prevalence of serum 25(OH)D < 30 nmol/l compared to whites (at 3 %)(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5). Whiting et al. (Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) recently showed in the Canadian Health Measures Survey that the year-round prevalence estimates for serum 25(OH)D concentrations < 30, < 40 and < 50 nmol/l were 3·0, 8·7 and 19·9 %, respectively, in whites and 16·3, 30·5 and 51·4 %, respectively, in non-whites. Thus, prevalence estimates for these different degrees of low vitamin D status in Irish adults were much higher (about double) than that of North American Caucasians(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5, Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6). Data from the UK-based National Diet and Nutrition Survey of adults (18–64 years)(Reference Ruston, Hoare and Henderson32) show that year-round prevalence estimates of serum 25(OH)D < 30, < 40 and < 50 nmol/l were 23·5, 41·0 and 55·5 %, respectively, while in older adults (65–84 years)(Reference Finch, Doyle and Lowe33), year-round prevalence estimates of serum 25(OH)D < 30 and < 40 ( < 50 not reported) nmol/l were 15·3 and 31·5 %, respectively. These UK surveys included a multi-ethnic population sample, but did not report serum 25(OH)D concentrations by ethnicity.

The mean serum 25(OH)D concentrations during winter in vitamin D-containing supplement users in the present study were as high as mean concentrations in non-users during summer, suggesting an ability of vitamin D supplement use to modulate an average seasonal decline of approximately 12 nmol/l in non-users. However, vitamin D deficiency (serum 25(OH)D concentrations < 30 nmol/l) still occurred in 7·5 % of vitamin D-containing supplement users in winter, and in 12·1 % non-users. While these 6-month extended winter and summer periods have been used in NHANES(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5) and the Canadian Health Measures Survey(Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6), and we have used for comparison purposes, this approach does not reflect true seasons as defined by the movement of the sun. In Ireland, winter would finish and spring begin by about March/April, and consequently, the nadir in serum 25(OH)D concentration would be at about March and a peak at about September/October(Reference Webb, Kline and Holick8, Reference Webb and Engelsen9). This was illustrated in the present study by an average difference in mean serum 25(OH)D concentration of about 32 nmol/l between those sampled in March and September. Diffey's mathematical model of seasonal change in serum 25(OH)D(Reference Diffey30) showed a steady daily increase in serum 25(OH)D from March to the end of May, even greater daily increments during June, July and August and a possible peak by early September. Sun exposure was not assessed as part of NANS, but the observed mean monthly serum 25(OH)D concentrations were in close agreement with predicted serum 25(OH)D concentrations from the model. It is assumed within the model that dietary vitamin D intake does not change by season (an assumption strengthened by the present vitamin D intake findings), and thus the improvement in status during the extended summer period arises from increased dermal synthesis of vitamin D upon exposure to UVB sunshine. However, the risk of skin damage and cancer prohibits use of sunshine exposure as a public health measure to correct endemic low-vitamin D status. In addition, even in summer time, when status should be its highest, 3·4 % of NANS participants still had serum 25(OH)D concentrations < 30 nmol/l (and 28·9 %, < 50 nmol/l). While dietary supply of vitamin D takes on increasing importance, it is low for most European populations(Reference Flynn, Hirvonen and Mensink34). The mean daily intake of vitamin D for the present group of Irish adults was 209 IU/d (5·2 μg/d).

The present study showed that compared to non-users, vitamin D-containing supplement use was important in achieving a higher mean serum 25(OH)D in winter (15·7 nmol/l, on average), and, albeit to a lesser degree, also in summer (6·8 nmol/l, on average). We have previously shown that vitamin D-containing supplement use by Irish post-menopausal women was associated with a higher serum 25(OH)D concentration in summer (as well as winter) compared to non-users(Reference Hill, Collins and O'Brien19). Whiting et al. (Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) also recently reported higher mean serum 25(OH)D concentrations among supplement users in both winter and summer.

Of note, while vitamin D-containing supplement use appeared to dramatically reduce the prevalence of serum 25(OH)D concentrations < 30, < 40 and < 50 nmol/l compared to that in non-users in both the Canadian(Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) and Irish surveys, it did not prevent their occurrence in winter or even totally in summer. For example, even though taking a vitamin D-containing supplement, one individual (0·9 %) in the present survey and seventeen individuals (1·9 %) in the Canadian survey(Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) had serum 25(OH)D concentrations < 30 nmol/l in summer, as compared to a prevalence of 3·6 and 4·7 % in Irish and Canadian non-users, respectively. Furthermore, despite conferring a benefit in terms of higher mean serum 25(OH)D concentrations in those adults who used vitamin D-containing supplements, it is worth re-emphasising that only 17·5 % of the Irish adults aged 18–84 years (16 % of those aged 18–64 years) consumed them. The previous national Irish nutrition survey in 1997–1999 showed that 15 % of adults aged 18–64 years consumed a vitamin D-containing supplement(Reference Kiely, Flynn and Harrington23). Such data might suggest that the efforts at increasing public and health professional awareness of vitamin D nutritional status(22) have not translated into increased uptake of supplement use. Gahche et al. (Reference Gahche, Bailey and Burt35) recently showed that rates of vitamin D-containing supplement use in the US adults aged 20–59 years participating in various cycles of NHANES remained stable from the period 1999–2002 to 2003–2006 (average 35 %), but increased significantly in women aged 60+ years (49·7–56·3 %, respectively), but not men. While previous data is not available to compare against, the rate of vitamin D supplement use (27·6 %) in older Irish adults (>65 years) in the present survey was much higher than in younger adults. The higher use of vitamin D-containing supplements in the 65+ age group compared to younger age groups may underpin the lower percentage of subjects with winter serum 25(OH)D less than 50 nmol/l in the former compared to later groups. However, despite the higher use of vitamin D-containing supplements in these older subjects, they had the highest prevalence of serum 25(OH)D less than 50 nmol/l during summer, likely due to a lower efficiency of dermal production of vitamin D upon exposure to UVB sunlight compared to younger adults(Reference Holick, Matsuoka and Wortsman36, Reference Need, Morris and Horowitz37). Within the 65+ age group, a high proportion (70 %) of the vitamin D-containing supplement users also consumed supplemental Ca, which may reflect self- or medically prescribed supplement use for osteoporosis prevention. Also of note, and possibly a contributory factor in the better vitamin D status in North American whites, is the much higher uptake of vitamin D supplement use (between 32 and 56·3 % depending on age, sex and country) by individuals in the USA and Canada(Reference Looker, Johnson and Lacher5, Reference Whiting, Langlois and Vatanparast6) compared to Ireland.

Although supplements contribute 9 and 17 % to vitamin D intakes in Irish adults aged 18–64 years and ≥ 65 years, respectively, and almost a quarter of vitamin D intakes in women and 12 % in men in the UK adult population(Reference Henderson, Irving and Gregory38), overall mean daily intakes of vitamin D are low, so these contributions, while proportionally high, are quantitatively low. Furthermore, evidence seems to suggest that the population intake of vitamin D from supplements in other European countries is also quite low(Reference Flynn, Hirvonen and Mensink34). This is a function mainly of the relatively low vitamin D content of most supplements in some countries relative to DRI, particularly the new North American values(4). For example, the median concentration of vitamin D in the supplements consumed by participants in the present survey was only 200 IU/d (5·0 μg/d). Even within vitamin D-containing supplement users, 53 % failed to reach the EAR intake target for vitamin D (400 IU/d; 10·0 μg/d). On the other hand, the low content possibly helped protect against serum 25(OH)D concentration >125 nmol/l, with only 1·5 % of supplement users exceeding this threshold in the present survey.

With the exception of specific patient groups, supplementation as a preventive strategy is likely to have limited effectiveness in population health promotion in Europe due to relatively low compliance in some populations. It is clear that sustainable solutions to counteract the prevailing high prevalence of low vitamin D status will require appropriate food-based strategies that will prevent vitamin D inadequacy across all sectors of the population. The present findings showed how achieving the EAR of 400 IU (10·0 μg) vitamin D/d protected all but 19 % of adults in maintaining winter-time serum 25(OH) ≥ 40 nmol/l (the average requirement for vitamin D in terms of bone health); however, over 85–97 % of Irish adults have intakes ≤ 400 IU (10·0 μg), depending on age and sex group. Vitamin D fortification (mandatory or voluntarily) of food has been viewed by some as an alternative, feasible and effective measure once applied in an evidence-based approach. At present, vitamin D intake from voluntary fortified foods in Europe is low(Reference Flynn, Hirvonen and Mensink34), highlighting the need to explore strategies for fortification of select foods with a content of vitamin D, which will allow individuals to attain dietary targets.

In conclusion, this is the first nationally representative data on vitamin D status for Irish adults and it shows that while serum 25(OH)D concentrations reflective of vitamin D deficiency only occur in 6·7 % of the population throughout the year, 40·1 % have levels considered by the IOM as being inadequate for bone health. These prevalence estimates are much higher during winter time. While vitamin D supplement use has benefits in terms of higher mean serum 25(OH)D concentrations and lower prevalence rates of low status, at present rates of usage (17·5 % of Irish adults), supplement use will have only very limited impact at a population level. Thus, there is a need to explore food-based strategies for improving vitamin D status, including fortified foods.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114512003212

Acknowledgements

The present research was funded by the Irish Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine and The Health Research Board under their joint Food for Health Research Initiative (2007–2). The authors’ contributions were as follows: M. J. G., K. D. C. and A. F. were involved in conception of work and are grant holders; A. F., J. W., B. M., A. N. and M. J. G. contributed to study design and execution of study; S. M. and K. D. C. contributed to sample analysis; all authors contributed to data analysis and writing of manuscript. None of the authors has a conflict of interest.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1 Modelled variation in serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) from March to September for the Republic of Ireland (solid curve) using Diffey's model(30) and the mean (sd) monthly measured serum 25(OH)D concentrations (data points with error bars) for adults in the National Adult Nutrition Survey. (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn)

Figure 1

Table 1 Distribution of subjects by serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentration, season and sex in the National Adult Nutrition Survey of adults aged 18–84 years in Ireland, 2008–10*†‡ (Number of subjects, percentages and 95 % confidence intervals)

Figure 2

Table 2 Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentration by vitamin D-containing supplement use, season, sex and age group in subjects in the National Adult Nutrition Survey of adults aged 18–84 years in Ireland, 2008–2010 (Mean values, number of subjects and 95 % confidence intervals)

Figure 3

Table 3 Distribution of subjects taking a vitamin D-containing supplement, by serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations and sex in subjects in the National Adult Nutrition Survey of adults aged 18–84 years in Ireland, 2008–10* (Number of subjects, percentages and 95 % confidence intervals)

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