RReduction in bone loss from 5 to 20 weeks postpartum in adolescents supplemented with calcium plus vitamin D during pregnancy is not sustained at 1 year postpartum: follow-up study of a randomized controlled trial
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The Journal of Nutrition
Abstract
Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation of pregnant Brazilian adolescents with habitually low calcium
intake (∼600 mg/d) reduced bone loss during the first 20 wk postpartum.
Objective: We investigated maternal bone mass changes during the first year postpartum as a follow-up of the clinical
trial.
Methods: Pregnant adolescents (14–19 y) received calcium (600 mg/d) plus cholecalciferol (200 IU/d) supplementation
(n = 30) or placebo (n = 26) from 26 wk of gestation until parturition. Bone area and bone mineral content and bone
mineral density (BMD) at total body, lumbar spine, and hip (total and femoral neck) were assessed by DXA at 3 time
points postpartum (5 wk, 20 wk, and 56 wk). Intervention group, time postpartum, and group × time interaction effects
were tested by repeated-measures mixed-effects models adjusting for calcium intake, return of menses, breastfeeding
practices, and body weight.
Results: Time (P < 0.05) but not group affected several absolute bone measurements. There was a group × time
interaction for femoral neck BMD (P = 0.045). Mean ± SE values (g/cm2) at 5 wk, 20 wk, and 56 wk were, respectively,
1.025 ± 0.026, 0.980 ± 0.026, and 1.022 ± 0.027 for the placebo group and 1.057 ± 0.025, 1.030 ± 0.024, and
1.055 ± 0.025 for the supplemented group. An interaction also was observed for percentage change in femoral neck
BMD relative to 5 wk (P = 0.049), with a more pronounced decrease in the placebo group (−4.58 ± 0.42%) than
in the supplemented group (−3.15% ± 0.42%) at 20 wk (P = 0.019), and no difference between groups at 56 wk
(−0.44% ± 0.71% in the placebo and −0.76% ± 0.62% in the supplemented group; P = 0.65).
Conclusions: Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation of the adolescent mothers reduces the magnitude of bone loss
at the femoral neck from 5 to 20 wk postpartum without an effect on bone changes after 1 y postpartum, indicating that
there is no sustained effect of the supplement tested.
Description
p. 548–555.: il. p&b.
Citation
BEZERRA, Flavia Fioruci; DONANGELO, Carmen Marino; MELO, Maria Eduarda Leão Diogenes. Reduction in bone loss from 5 to 20 weeks postpartum in adolescents supplemented with calcium plus vitamin D during pregnancy is not sustained at 1 year postpartum: follow-up study of a randomized controlled trial. The Journal of Nutrition, v. 151, p. 548–555, 2021.