1. Measured free 25-hydroxyvitamin D in healthy children and relationship to total 25-hydroxyvitamin D, calculated free 25-hydroxyvitamin D and vitamin D binding protein.
- Author
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Lopez-Molina M, Santillan C, Murillo M, Valls A, Bosch L, Bel J, and Granada ML
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Biomarkers blood, Calcifediol chemistry, Calcifediol deficiency, Calcifediol metabolism, Calcium blood, Child, Child, Preschool, Cohort Studies, Female, Hospitals, University, Humans, Male, Outpatient Clinics, Hospital, Parathyroid Hormone blood, Prospective Studies, Reference Values, Sensitivity and Specificity, Solubility, Vitamin D Deficiency diagnosis, Vitamin D-Binding Protein metabolism, Asymptomatic Diseases, Calcifediol blood, Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena, Nutritional Status, Vitamin D Deficiency blood, Vitamin D-Binding Protein blood
- Abstract
Background: vitamin D deficiency in children is still a global health problem. Measuring free 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations could provide a better estimate of the vitamin D status than total 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels., Objective: To assess the relationship between measured free vitamin D (m-f25(OH)D) and calculated free 25(OH)D (c-f25(OH)D), total 25(OH)D, intact parathyroid hormone (iPTH) and other markers of phosphocalcic metabolism. To establish serum m-f25(OH)D concentrations corresponding to a total 25(OH)D > 50 nmol/L which is accepted as vitamin D-sufficiency status in children., Design: Prospective cohort study., Setting: January and February 2017 in a Mediterranean population., Patients: healthy children., Measurements: m-f25(OH)D and vitamin D binding protein (VDBP) by ELISA. Free 25(OH)D was calculated using the formula described by Bikle., Results: m-f25(OH)D directly correlated with total 25(OH)D (r:0.804,p < .001), serum calcium (r:0.26,p:0.035), and c-f25(OH)D (r:0.553,p:0.016); and inversely with iPTH (r:-0.374, p:0.002), alkaline phosphatase (r:-0.28, p:0.026), and age (r:-0.289, p:0.018). Total 25(OH)D correlated with the same parameters as m-f25(OH)D except for serum calcium. However, c-f25(OH)D correlated only with total 25(OH)D and VDBP, both included in the calculation formula. Multiple regression analysis showed that m-f25(OH)D variations were independently explained by calcium (β:0.156, p:0.026) and total 25(OH)D (β:0.043, p < .001). The optimal m-f25(OH)D cut-off for discriminating between insufficient and sufficient total 25(OH)D was >9.8 pmol/L (Area Under Curve (AUC): 0.897 (95% confidence interval (CI): (0.798-0.958); p < .001; sensitivity:72.7% (95%CI: 49.8-89.3); specificity: 95.5% (95%CI: 84.5-99.4))., Conclusions: Directly measured free vitamin D correlated better with markers of phosphocalcic metabolism than total 25(OH)D and c-f25(OH)D in a population of healthy children., (Copyright © 2018 The Canadian Society of Clinical Chemists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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