Newswise, April 3, 2017—After re-measurement of vitamin
D by improved technology, the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for vitamin D
intake drops from 800 to 400 International Units (IU) per day, new research
reports. The results of the study were presented at the annual scientific
meeting of the Endocrine Society, in Orlando, Fla.
"The RDA is easily achievable with a supplement of 400 IU
in winter, when vitamin D levels are lowest in North America," said
principal investigator J. Christopher Gallagher, M.D., professor and director
of the Bone Metabolism Unit in the Division of Endocrinology of Creighton
University School of Medicine in Omaha, Neb.
"This has important ramifications for public health
recommendations. The amount of vitamin D needed, 400 IU daily, is less than the
figure recommended by Institute of Medicine," said Gallagher, the study's
principal investigator.
"In estimating the RDA for vitamin D intake, the
laboratory method used for measuring serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D ̶ 25(OH)D ̶ can
affect the results," he said. "The estimated RDA based on the older
immunoassay (DiaSorin S.p.A., Salugia, Italy) system was 800 IU daily, whereas
the newer liquid chromatography tandem-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) technique
estimated that 400 IU daily would meet the RDA."
In their earlier double-blind dose-response clinical trial in
the winter and spring of 2007 to 2008, Gallagher and his colleagues enrolled
163 healthy postmenopausal Caucasian women 57 through 90 years of age with
vitamin D insufficiency and followed them for 1 year.
The women were at least 7 years postmenopausal and they had
vitamin D insufficiency based on the World Health Organization cutoff (serum
25(OH)D 20 ng/ml or lower).
The participants were randomized to one of seven vitamin D3
doses: 400, 800, 1600, 2400, 3200, 4000, 4800 IU/day or placebo, for 1 year,
and all the women were given calcium supplements to maintain a total calcium
intake.
After analyzing the samples and estimating the RDA using the
older immunoassay, the authors reported that 800 IU daily would meet the
vitamin D intake requirement for 97.5 percent of the population.
But now that liquid chromatography mass spectrometry
(LC-MS/MS) has become the gold standard for measuring 25(OH)D, the researchers
have reanalyzed the original samples using this new technology.
Able to determine a more precise dose-response curve, they
have calculated the RDA for vitamin D to be 400 IU daily.
"Remember, this RDA is for bone health only,"
Gallagher cautioned. "It may be different for other diseases. Although
trials looking into cancer, diabetes, and other diseases are ongoing, we do not
have information about this yet."
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