1. Is Serum Vitamin D Associated with Depression or Anxiety in Ante- and Postnatal Adult Women? A Systematic Review with Meta-Analysis.
- Author
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Centeno LOL, Fernandez MDS, Muniz FWMG, Longoni A, and de Assis AM
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Depression, Postpartum blood, Depression, Postpartum epidemiology, Depression, Postpartum etiology, Postpartum Period blood, Postpartum Period psychology, Pregnancy Complications blood, Pregnancy Complications epidemiology, Pregnancy Complications etiology, Pregnancy Complications psychology, Vitamin D Deficiency blood, Vitamin D Deficiency complications, Vitamin D Deficiency diagnosis, Vitamin D Deficiency psychology, Anxiety blood, Anxiety epidemiology, Anxiety etiology, Depression blood, Depression epidemiology, Depression etiology, Vitamin D blood, Vitamin D analogs & derivatives
- Abstract
Background/objectives: To collect evidence from studies that explored the associations between serum vitamin D (25[OH]D) concentrations/status and the presence of depressive/anxiety symptoms in the ante- and/or postnatal periods (PROSPERO-CRD42023390895)., Methods: Studies that assessed serum 25[OH]D concentrations in adult women during the ante/postnatal periods and those that used valid instruments to identify the experience/severity of depressive/anxiety symptoms were included. Independent researchers performed the identification/selection of studies, data extraction, risk of bias (RoB) assessment, and bibliometric analysis steps., Results: Of the total of 6769 eligible records, 15 cohort studies [high ( n = 3), moderate ( n = 7), and low ( n = 5) RoB], nine cross-sectional studies [moderate ( n = 3) and low ( n = 6) RoB], and one case-control study [moderate RoB] were included ( n = 25). Depression ( n = 24) and anxiety ( n = 4) symptoms were assessed. A significant difference in antenatal serum 25[OH]D concentrations between the groups of women with and without depression was identified (mean difference: -4.63 ng/mL; 95% confidence interval [95% CI]: -8.88; -0.38). Postnatal serum 25[OH]D concentrations were found to be, on average, -2.36 ng/mL (95% CI: -4.59; -0.14) lower in women with postnatal depression than in those without. Maternal antenatal anxiety was associated with significantly lower concentrations/deficiency of 25[OH]D in only one included study., Conclusions: Based on very low/low-quality evidence, it was observed that reduced serum 25[OH]D concentrations in the ante- and postnatal period are associated with the presence of ante- and postnatal depressive symptoms, respectively. Low/deficient antenatal serum 25[OH]D concentrations may not be related to the presence of anxiety symptoms before childbirth. Well-designed longitudinal studies are needed to explore the estimated pooled effect of these associations.
- Published
- 2024
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