Vitamin D Fortification of Fluid Milk Products and Their Contribution to Vitamin D Intake and Vitamin D Status in Observational Studies—A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Search Strategy
2.2. Eligibility and Study Selection
2.3. Data Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Contribution of Vitamin D-Fortified Milk to Vitamin D Intakes
3.1.1. Children and Adolescents
3.1.2. Adults and the Elderly, and Studies Including All Age Groups
3.2. Associations Between Consumption of Vitamin D-Fortified Milk and 25(OH)D Status
3.2.1. Children and Adolescents
3.2.2. Pregnant Women and Mother-Child Pairs
3.2.3. Adults, the Elderly, and All Age Groups
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations of the Study
4.2. Future Perspectives in Vitamin D Fortification
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Country | Vitamin D-Fortified Milk Products | Type of Fortification | Added Amount of Vitamin D | New Proposed Amounts of Vitamin D |
---|---|---|---|---|
Finland [6,7] | fluid milk products (milk, yoghurt, sourmilk) * | voluntary | 1 µg/100 g | na |
Norway [8] | extra low-fat milk (also lactose free) | voluntary | 0.4 µg/100 g | na |
Sweden [9,10] | low-fat milk (max 1.5% fat) | mandatory | 0.38–0.50 µg/100 g | 0.95–1.10 µg/100 g for milk <3% fat 0.75–1.10 µg/100 g for fermented milk <3% fat |
Canada [11] | milk | mandatory | 0.825–1.125 µg/100 g | 2 µg/100 g |
United States [12] | fluid milk (also acidified milk and cultured milk), yoghurt | voluntary ‡ | 1.05 µg/100 g for milk 2.225 µg/100 g for yoghurt § | na |
Reference | Country | Study Population | Dietary Assessment Method | Total/Dietary Vitamin D Intake (µg/day) | SD(or SEM *) | Vitamin D Intake from (fortified) Fluid Milk or Related Products (µg/day) | SD | Contribution of (Fortified) Milk to Total or Dietary Vitamin D Intake (%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children and adolescents | ||||||||
Black et al. (2014) [13] | Ireland | 594 children, 5–12 years and 441 teenagers, 13–17 years | 7-day (semi-) weighted food record | Total/dietary intake 5–8 years: 2.8/1.9 9–12 years: 2.8/2.2 13–17 years: 3.2/2.6 | 2.4/1.1 2.1/1.3 2.5/1.8 | Fortified milk: 0.1 Milk and yoghurt: 0.3–0.4 | na | Total intake Fortified milk: 2–3% Milk and yoghurt: 10–13% |
Cole et al. (2010) [29] | United States | 290 children, 1–5 years | 3-day food record | Dietary intake: 4.4 | 3.0 | Fortified milk: 2.7 † | na | Dietary intake Fortified milk: 62% |
Cribb et al. (2015) [14] | United Kingdom | 755 children, 1.5 years and 3.5 years | 3-day food diary | Dietary intake 1.5 years: 1.6 3.5 years: 1.8 | 1.5 1.4 | Yoghurt, cheese and milk 1.5 years: 0.035 µg/MJ/day 3.5 years: 0.023 µg/MJ/day | 0.02 µg/MJ/day 0.02 µg/MJ/day | Dietary intake Yoghurt, cheese and milk 1.5 years: 9% 3.5 years: 6% |
Hennessy et al. (2016) [15] | Ireland | 500 children, 1–4 years | 4-day weighted food diary | Total intake All subjects: 3.5 Fortified food consumers: 3.2 | 3.7 2.7 | Fortified milk All subjects: 0.1 Fortified food consumers: 0.1 | na | Total intake All subjects: 2% Fortified food consumers, supplement non-users: 13% |
Mark et al. (2011) [30] | Canada | 159 children, 8–11 years | 3 × 24 h recalls | Total/dietary intake: 6.6/5.6 | 4.3/3.5 | Milk: 3.3 † | na | Total/dietary intake Milk: 49/58% |
Piirainen et al. (2007) [32] | Finland | 36 children, 4 years | 4-day food record | Total/dietary intake: 7.9/4.5 | 6.3–9.6/3.8–5.1 § | 2.3 | 2.0–2.6 § | Total intake Milk: 54% |
Soininen et al. (2016) [31] | Finland | 374 children, 6–8 years | 4-day food record | Total/dietary intake: 7.7/5.9 | na/2.1 | Fluid milk: 2.9 All milk products: 3.1 | 1.5 1.4 | Total/dietary intake Fluid milk: 38/49% All milk products: 40/52% |
Adults and the elderly | ||||||||
Amcoff et al. (2012) [28] | Sweden | 1797 adults, 18–80 years | 4-day food diary | Dietary intake Women: 6.4 Men: 7.6 | 4.2/5.4 | na | na | Dietary intake Milk products: 12% |
Gonzalez-Rodriguez et al. (2013) [16] | Spain | 418 adults, 18–60 years | 24 h recall | Total/dietary intake: 3.5/3.2 | 4.0/3.8 | Dairy products: 0.5 † | na | Total/dietary intake Dairy products: 15/17% |
Holm Totland et al. (2012) [27] | Norway | 1787 adults, 18–70 years | 24 h recall | Total/dietary intake Women: 10/4.9 Men: 12/6.7 | na/4.3 na/5.7 | na | na | Dietary intake Vitamin D fortified extra-skimmed milk: 4% |
Jayaratne et al. (2013) [17] | Australia | 785 adults, ≥31 years | FFQ | Total intake: 4.4 | 4.0 | Dairy and related products including margarine: 1.9 † Milk: 0.8 † Yoghurt: 0.3 † | na na na | Total intake Dairy and related products including margarine: 43% Milk: 18% Yoghurt: 6% |
Jääskeläinen et al. (2017) [25] | Finland | 3635 adults, ≥30 years | FFQ | Dietary intake Men: 14 Women: 12 | 14–15 § 11–12 § | na | na | Dietary intake Fluid milk products: 34% |
Kinyamu et al. (1998) [41] | United States | 376 elderly women, 65–77 years | 7-day food record | Total intake Supplement non-users: 3.5 Supplement users: 13.4 | 2.2 2.0 | Milk Supplement non-users: 2.0 Supplement users: 1.8 | 1.6 1.5 | Total intake Milk: 51% |
Kolahdooz et al. (2013) [38] | Canada | 203 Inuit and Inuvialuit women, 19–44 years | FFQ | All subjects: 6.0 ‡ Traditional food eaters: 7.1 ‡ Non-traditional food eaters: 4.9 ‡ | 6.3 5.3 3.2 | Dairy group (milk, yoghurt, cheese and eggs) Traditional food eaters: 2.2 Non-traditional food eaters: 1.9 | na na | Dairy group (milk, yoghurt, cheese and eggs) Traditional food eaters: 31% ‡ Non-traditional food eaters: 39% ‡ |
Levy et al. (2015) [39] | United States | 743 adults, 20–65 years | one week diet history | Total intake Winter season: 4.5 Summer season: 4.3 | 4.0 3.2 | Dairy products Winter season: 1.9 Summer season: 1.9 | 2.5 3.8 | Dietary intake Winter season: 43% Summer season: 41% |
Moore et al. (2014) [37] | United States | 9719 adults, ≥19 years | 24 h recall | Total/dietary intake 8.6/4.4 | 0.3/0.1 * | Milk and milk drinks: 1.7 † Fortified milk and milk products: 1.9 † | na na | Total/dietary intake Milk and milk drinks: 20/39% Fortified milk and milk products: 22/44% |
O’Dowd et al. (1993) [41] | United States | 109 elderly, >60 years | FFQ or 3-day dietary record | Total/dietary intake All subjects: 9.5/ Supplement non-users: 7.3 | 5.1/2.5 | Fortified milk All subjects: 4.7 | 1.9 | Total intake Fortified milk: 50% |
Poliquin et al. (2009) [33] | Canada | 9425 adults, ≥25 years | interview-administered semi-quantitative FFQ | Total intake from milk and supplements Women: 5.6 Men: 4.8 | 5.9 5.5 | Milk Women: 2.7 Men: 3.0 | 2.9 3.5 | Total intake from milk and supplements Women: 48% Men: 63% |
Raulio et al. (2017) [42] | Finland | 1295 adults, 25–64 years | 24 h recall | Total intake Women: all women: 17.5 Supplement non-users: 8.6 Supplement users: 24.7 Men: all men: 17.3 Supplement non-users: 11.2 Supplement users: 29.5 | 15.4 6.2 16.8 17.0 7.5 23.1 | na | na | Dietary intake Milk: 28–39%, depending on age and sex |
All ages | ||||||||
Hill et al. (2012) [36] | United States and Canada | 7837 US and 4025 Canadian citizens, ≥2 years | 7- to 14-day household food diary | Total intake United States: 4.4 Canada: 4.2 | 0.03 * 0.5 * | Milk United States: 2.0 Canada: 1.9 | na na | Total intake Milk: 44% in both countries |
Moore et al. (2004) [34] | United States | 18931 subjects, >1 years | 24 h recall | Total/dietary intake: 5.3–9.8/3.9–7.0 depending on age and sex | na | na | na | Dietary intake Dairy products: 45–47% |
Vatanparast et al. (2010) [35] | Canada | 34789 subjects, >1 years | 24 h recall | Dietary intake: 6.2 | 0.1 * | Milk products: 2.9 | na | Dietary intake Milk products: 49% |
Reference | Country (Latitude) | Season Blood Drawn | Study Population | 25(OH)D Assay Method (Quality Control of Assay: Certificate; CV% <15%) | Dietary Assessment Method | Serum or Plasma 25(OH)D nmol/L Mean (or Median *) | SD (or IQR † or 95% CI ‡ or SE §) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Children and adolescents | |||||||
Abu Shady et al. (2016) [43] | Egypt (31° N) | April, May | 200 children, 9–11 years | Quantitative enzyme immunoassay (na; na) | Questionnaire | 41 | 14 |
Barman et al. (2015) [50] | Sweden (63° N) | All | 165 children, 13 years | LC-MS/MS (na; na) | FFQ | 51 | 14 |
Cole et al. (2010) [29] | United States (33° N) | All | 290 children, 1–5 years | LC-MS/MS (na; na) | 3-day food record | 65 | 19 |
Lee et al. (2014) [46] | Canada (43° N) | All | 2468 children, 1–6 years | Diasorin LIAISON (na; yes except inter CV% 17.4% at high concentrations) | Questionnaire | 80 * | 66–99 † |
Mark et al. (2011) [30] | Canada (45° N) | All | 159 children, 8–11 years | IDS radioimmunoassay (na; yes) | 3 × 24 h recalls | Winter/spring: 50 Summer/autumn: 58 | 10 15 |
Munasinghe et al. (2017) [47,48] | Canada (various latitudes) | All | 2270 children, 3–18 years | Diasorin LIAISON (na; yes) | FFQ | 62 | 56–69 ‡ |
Rodríguez–Rodríguez et al. (2011) [49] | Spain (40° N) | February | 102 children, 9–13 years | Chemiluminescence (na; na) | 3-day weighted food diary | 50 | 16 |
Rosendahl et al. (2017) [45] | Finland (60° N) | January–June | 171 children, 10 years | Roche Diagnostics immunocheminuminescence (na; na) | FFQ | 73 | 22 |
Soininen et al. (2016) [31] | Finland (62° N) | All but July | 374 children, 6–8 years | Diasorin LIAISON (na; yes) | 4-day food record | 69 | 24 |
Öberg et al. (2014) [51] | Norway (69° N) | September–April | 890 children, 15–18 years | LC–MS/MS (DEQAS; yes) | Questionnaire | Boys: 41 Girls: 54 | 21 23 |
Pregnant women and mother-child pairs | |||||||
Charatcharoenwitthaya et al. (2013) [52] | Thailand (14° N) | Winter season: 72%, rainy season: 28% | 120 pregnant women, 18–40 years | LC–MS/MS MassCrom (na; yes) | Interviewed questionnaire | 1st trimester: 61 2nd trimester: 84 3rd trimester: 90 | 17 20 22 |
Gharaibeh et al. (2009) [44] | Jordan (31° N) | June and July | 93 children (4–5 years) and mothers (mean age 34 years) dyads | IDS ELISA (na; na) | Questionnaire | Mothers: 26 Children: 56 | 10 20 |
Hauta–alus et al. (2017) [53] | Finland (60° N) | All | 584 newborns and mothers (18–43 years) | IDS–iSYS (DEQAS; yes) | FFQ | Mothers: 89 Cord blood: 88 | 19 22 |
Adults and the elderly | |||||||
Burgaz et al. (2007) [56] | Sweden (60° N) | January–March | 116 elderly women, 61–86 years | IDS EIA (na; yes) | FFQ | 69 | 23 |
Hobbs et al. (2009) [54] | United States (42° N) | April | 87 women, ≥18 years | Diasorin LIAISON (na; na) | Questionnaire | Unveiled subjects: 21 * Veiled supplement users: 17 * Veiled supplement non-users: 10 * | 14–34 † 10–29 † 5–17 † |
Kinyamu et al. (1998) [41] | United States (41° N) | All | 376 elderly women, 65–77 years | Competitive binding assay (na; yes) | 7-day food record | Supplement non-users: 74 Supplement users: 88 | 23 28 |
Levy et al. (2015) [39] | United States (various latitudes) | February–April and August–October | 743 adults, 20–65 years | Diasorin LIAISON (College of American Pathology; na) | One week diet history | Summer: 101 Winter: 93 | 42 39 |
McCarroll et al. (2015) [57] | Ireland (52° N) | All | 3 cohorts (1233, 1895, 1316) of elderly subjects, >60 years | LC–MS (DEQAS; yes) | Questionnaire | Supplement non-users: 46/61/68 Supplement users: 67/83/74 | 24/32/23 27/27/30 |
O’Dowd et al. (1993) [40] | United States (41° N) | January–May | 109 elderly, >60 years | Competitive binding assay (na; yes) | FFQ or 3-day dietary record | All subjects: 45 Supplement non-users: 40 Supplement users: 65 | 2 § 2 § 3 § |
All ages | |||||||
Langlois et al. (2010) [55] | Canada (various latitudes) | All | 5306 subjects, 6–79 years | Diasorin Liaison (DEQAS; yes) | Interviewed questionnaire | All subjects 68 April–October 70 November–March 64 | 65–70 ‡ 66–74 ‡ 60–68 ‡ |
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Itkonen, S.T.; Erkkola, M.; Lamberg-Allardt, C.J.E. Vitamin D Fortification of Fluid Milk Products and Their Contribution to Vitamin D Intake and Vitamin D Status in Observational Studies—A Review. Nutrients 2018, 10, 1054. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081054
Itkonen ST, Erkkola M, Lamberg-Allardt CJE. Vitamin D Fortification of Fluid Milk Products and Their Contribution to Vitamin D Intake and Vitamin D Status in Observational Studies—A Review. Nutrients. 2018; 10(8):1054. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081054
Chicago/Turabian StyleItkonen, Suvi T., Maijaliisa Erkkola, and Christel J. E. Lamberg-Allardt. 2018. "Vitamin D Fortification of Fluid Milk Products and Their Contribution to Vitamin D Intake and Vitamin D Status in Observational Studies—A Review" Nutrients 10, no. 8: 1054. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081054
APA StyleItkonen, S. T., Erkkola, M., & Lamberg-Allardt, C. J. E. (2018). Vitamin D Fortification of Fluid Milk Products and Their Contribution to Vitamin D Intake and Vitamin D Status in Observational Studies—A Review. Nutrients, 10(8), 1054. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10081054