Vitamin D: Daily vs. Monthly Use in Children and Elderly—What Is Going On?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Vitamin D in the Childhood
2.1. The First Year of Life
Daily vs. Monthly Dose
2.2. Children Aged 1–18 Years
Daily vs. Monthly Dose
3. Vitamin D in the Elderly
3.1. Elderly Population
3.1.1. Vitamin D, Weight and BMI
3.1.2. Daily vs. Monthly Dose
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Society | Vitamin D Supplementation |
---|---|
Society of Lawson Wilkins Pediatric Endocrinology (Misra 2008 [14]) | - 400 IU/day should be initiated from the first day of life in all breastfed babies, and children not breastfed do not take at least one liter/day of milk formula fortified with vitamin D. - Children with dark skin or who live at high latitudes (>40°) may require vitamin D supplementation at higher doses (800 IU/day), especially during the winter months. |
ESPGHAN (Braegger 2013 [15]) | 400 IU/day of vitamin D in all children during the first year of life. |
AAP (Wagner 2008 [11], Golden 2014 [16]) | Children breastfed or partially breastfed with 400 IU/day from the first day of life. Supplementation until the child is weaned and takes at least 1 liter/day of vitamin D-fortified milk formula. |
Endocrine Society (Holick 2011 [17]) | Children in the first year of life at risk of vitamin D deficiency should receive supplementation with 400 IU/day to 1000 IU/day. |
Health Canada and the Canadian Paediatric Society [18] | 0–6 months - 400 IU/day in breastfed children. - Children who are not breastfed require prophylaxis with vitamin D because infant formula contains vitamin D. - Children partially breastfed 400 IU/day, regardless of how much formula milk taken. 6–12 months - 400 IU/day in children who are still exclusively breastfed or who take breast milk. |
United Kingdom Department of Health [19] | - All children between 6 months and 5 years: to ensure a 280 IU/day–340 IU/day intake. Infants fed with formula milk do not require prophylaxis if they take at least 500 mL/day of formulation enriched milk with vitamin D. - Breastfed babies may need to receive prophylaxis from the first month of life if the mother did not take supplements during pregnancy. |
Paediatric and Adolescent Bone Group UK (Arundel 2012 [18]) | It recommends that children fed exclusively by breastfeeding start prophylaxis immediately after birth. |
A French company of Paediatrics (Vidailhet 2012 [19]) | - Children fed exclusively by breastfeeding: 1000 IU/day–1200 IU/day for the entire lactation. - Children under 18 months of age who take milk fortified with vitamin D3: 600 IU/day–800 IU/day. - Children under 18 months of age receiving unfortified cow’s milk with vitamin D3: 1000 IU/day–1200 IU/day. |
A Spanish company of Paediatrics (Martinez Suarez 2012 [20]) | For the child in the first year of life: 400 IU/day or the use of formula milk sufficiently enriched with vitamin D are the best strategies to ensure adequate vitamin intake. |
Central Europe (Płudowski 2013 [21]) | - Prophylactic vitamin D should start from the earliest days of life, regardless of the type of feeding. - 400 IU/day up to 6 months of life. - 400 IU/day–600 IU/day between 6 and 12 months of life, according to the contribution of vitamin D daily with the diet. |
Australia and New Zealand (Paxton 2013 [22]) | Children at risk of vitamin D deficiency: 400 IU/day at least for the first year of life. |
Society | Vitamin D Supplementation |
---|---|
The American Academy of Pediatrics (Wagner 2008 [11], Golden 2014 [16]) | Wagner 2008: - Teenagers who do not get 400 IU/day of vitamin D through milk or other fortified foods: 400 IU/day. - Children with increased risk of vitamin D, malabsorption, anticonvulsants treatment: 400 IU/day. Golden 2014: Children over one year of age and adolescents: 600 IU/day, obese subjects treated with anticonvulsant drugs, corticosteroids, antifungal or antiretroviral drugs may require 2–4 times the recommended dose of vitamin D. |
Endocrine Society (Holick 2011 [17]) | 600 to 1000 IU/day. Obese subjects treated with anticonvulsant drugs, corticosteroids, antifungals such as ketoconazole and antiretroviral drugs should receive at least 2–3 times the daily requirements of vitamin D for their age. |
ESPGHAN (Braegger 2013 [15]) | - UL: 2000 IU/day between 1 year and 10 years old, 4000 IU/day between 11 years and 17 years. |
Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine (2013) [32] | 600 IU/day (400 IU/day–800 IU/day according to the preparations available on the market) in healthy adolescents, and supplementation with minimum 1000 IU/day in adolescents at risk of vitamin D deficiency. |
United Kingdom Department of Health [19] | All children between 6 months and 5 years: 280 IU/day–340 IU/day. No supplement in children receiving at least 500 mL/day of formula milk enriched with vitamin D. |
French company of Pediatrics (Vidailhet 2012 [19]) | - In children 18 months–5 years: 2 doses of 80,000 IU or 100,000 IU in winter (November to February) - 6 years to 18 years: 2 doses of 80,000 IU or 100,000 IU in the winter (November to February) or a single dose of 200,000 IU. |
A Spanish company of Pediatrics (Martinez Suarez 2012 [20]) | Daily intake: 600 IU/day |
Central Europe (Płudowski 2013 [21]) | - Supplementation with 600 IU/day to 1000 IU/day (depending on body weight) of vitamin D and recommended between September and April. - Supplementation with 600 IU/day to 1000 IU/day (depending on body weight) of vitamin D and recommended throughout the year if good cutaneous production of vitamin D is not guaranteed during the summer. - In obese children and adolescents (BMI > 90th percentile for age and sex) supplementation with 1200 IU/day–2000 IU/day (depending on the severity of obesity) of vitamin D between September and April is recommended. - In obese children and adolescents (BMI > 90th percentile for age and sex) supplementation with 1200 IU/day–2000 IU/day (depending on the severity of obesity) of vitamin D throughout the year is recommended. - UL: 2000 IU/day between 1 year and 10 years old, 4000 IU/day between 11 years and 18 years. |
Australia and New Zealand (Paxton 2013 [22]) | In subjects 1 year–18 years old with risk factors for vitamin D deficiency: 400U/day or 150,000 IU early autumn. |
Society | Vitamin D Supplementation |
---|---|
Institute of Medicine (2010 [43]) | 600 IU/day, 18 years–70 years old 800 IU/day, over 70 years old |
Endocrine Society Clinical Practice Guideline (2011 [49]) | 1500 IU/day–2000 IU/day, over 19 years old |
Osteoporosis Australia (2016 [44]) | At least 600 IU/day, under 70 years old At least 800 IU/day, over 70 years old Sun avoiders or people at risk of vitamin D deficiency: 1000 IU/day–2000 IU/day |
National Osteoporosis Society Practical Guides (2013 [45]) | People aged 65 years and over, people who are not exposed to much sun, pregnant and breastfeeding women: 400 IU/day |
Italian guidelines for diagnosis, prevention and treatment of osteoporosis (2015 [46]) | Baseline vit. D level < 25 nmol/L: cumulative dose 600,000 IU supporting dose 2000 IU/day Baseline vit. D level 25 nmol/L–50 nmol/L: cumulative dose 400,000 IU supporting dose 1000 IU/day Baseline vit. D level 50 nmol/L–75 nmol/L: cumulative dose 100,000 IU supporting dose 800 IU/day |
Body Weight (kg) | 30-Year-Old Person | 70-Year-Old Person |
---|---|---|
50 | 42 µg (1680 IU) | 24 µg (960 IU) |
75 | 63 µg (2520 IU) | 36.5 µg (1460 IU) |
100 | 84 µg (3360 IU) | 49 µg (1960 IU) |
Study | Design | Efficacy (25-OHD Level > 30 ng/mL) | Safety |
---|---|---|---|
2011, Binkley et al. [1] | 1600 IU daily vs. 50,000 IU monthly. 64 adults over 1 year. | Similar efficacy. 19% of patients did not reach a 25-OHD level > 30 ng/mL. | No hypercalcemia detected. Similar serum calcium levels. |
2015, Wijnen et al. [4] | 800 IU daily vs. Loading Dose (40 × (25-OHD target − 25-OHD baseline) × weight) + 50,000 or 25,000 IU monthly (LD). 30 adults over 26 weeks. | Daily group less efficient than LD group (30% vs. 83%). | Not applicable. |
2016, Bischoff-Ferrari et al. [8] | 24,000 IU vs. 60,000 IU vs. 24,000 IU + 300 ug calcifediol monthly. 200 adults with a prior fall over 1 year. | 24,000 IU group less efficient than 60,000 IU and 24,000 IU + calcifediol (54.7% vs. 80.8% and 83.3%). | Significant increasing in falls in 60,000 IU and 24,000 IU + calcifediol groups compared to 24,000 IU group (66.9–66.1% vs. 47.9%). |
2011, Papaioannou et al. [47] | 50,000 IU + 1000 IU daily vs. 100,000 IU + 1000 IU daily vs. placebo + 1000 IU daily. 65 adults over 90 days. | Similar efficacy. 25% of patients did not reach a 25-OHD level > 30 ng/mL. | Similar, all adverse events judged unrelated to the study treatments. |
2010, Pekkarinen et al. [50] | 800 IU daily vs. 97,333 IU every 4 months (4M). 40 women over 1 year. | Daily group more efficient than 4M (47% vs. 28%). | Similar increase in urinary calcium. |
2014, Meekiins et al. [51] | 5000 IU daily vs. 150,000 IU once. 39 women over 28 days. | Similar area under curve for 25-OHD level. | No relevant changes in serum calcium or phosphorus. |
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Dalle Carbonare, L.; Valenti, M.T.; Del Forno, F.; Caneva, E.; Pietrobelli, A. Vitamin D: Daily vs. Monthly Use in Children and Elderly—What Is Going On? Nutrients 2017, 9, 652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070652
Dalle Carbonare L, Valenti MT, Del Forno F, Caneva E, Pietrobelli A. Vitamin D: Daily vs. Monthly Use in Children and Elderly—What Is Going On? Nutrients. 2017; 9(7):652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070652
Chicago/Turabian StyleDalle Carbonare, Luca, Maria Teresa Valenti, Francesco Del Forno, Elena Caneva, and Angelo Pietrobelli. 2017. "Vitamin D: Daily vs. Monthly Use in Children and Elderly—What Is Going On?" Nutrients 9, no. 7: 652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070652
APA StyleDalle Carbonare, L., Valenti, M. T., Del Forno, F., Caneva, E., & Pietrobelli, A. (2017). Vitamin D: Daily vs. Monthly Use in Children and Elderly—What Is Going On? Nutrients, 9(7), 652. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu9070652