Losing More than 15% Body Weight
Significantly Boosts Vitamin D Levels in
Obese Women
Newswise, May 29, 2011-- Overweight or
obese women with less-than-optimal
levels of vitamin D who lose more than
15 percent of their body weight
experience significant increases in
circulating levels of this fat-soluble
nutrient, according to a new study by
researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer
Research Center.
“Since vitamin D is generally lower in
persons with obesity, it is possible
that low vitamin D could account, in
part, for the link between obesity and
diseases such as cancer, heart disease
and diabetes,” said Caitlin Mason,
Ph.D., lead author of the paper,
published online May 25 in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
“Determining whether weight loss helps
change vitamin D status is important for
understanding potential avenues for
disease prevention,” said Mason, a
postdoctoral research fellow in the
Hutchinson Center’s Public Health
Sciences Division.
According to the National Institutes of
Health, vitamin D plays many important
roles in the body. It promotes calcium
absorption and is needed for bone growth
and bone healing. Along with calcium,
vitamin D helps protect older adults
from osteoporosis.
The nutrient also influences cell
growth, neuromuscular and immune
function, and reduces inflammation. Many
gene-encoding proteins that regulate
cell proliferation, differentiation, and
apoptosis (programmed cell death) are
modulated in part by the vitamin.
The year-long study – one of the largest
ever conducted to assess the effect of
weight loss on vitamin D – involved 439
overweight-to-obese, sedentary,
postmenopausal Seattle-area women, ages
50 to 75, who were randomly assigned to
one of four groups: exercise only, diet
only, exercise plus diet and no
intervention.
Those who lost 5 percent to 10 percent
of their body weight – equivalent to
approximately 10 to 20 pounds for most
of the women in the study – through diet
and/or exercise saw a relatively small
increase in blood levels of vitamin D
(about 2.7 nanograms per milliliter, or
ng/mL), whereas women who lost more than
15 percent of their weight experienced a
nearly threefold increase in vitamin D
(about 7.7 ng/mL), independent of
dietary intake of the nutrient.
“We were surprised at the effect of
weight loss greater than 15 percent on
blood vitamin D levels,” said senior
author Anne McTiernan, M.D., Ph.D.,
director of the Hutchinson Center’s
Prevention Center and principal
investigator of the study. “It appears
that the relationship between weight
loss and blood vitamin D is not linear
but goes up dramatically with more
weight loss. While weight loss of 5
percent to 10 percent is generally
recommended to improve risk factors such
as blood pressure, cholesterol and blood
sugars, our findings suggest that more
weight loss might be necessary to
meaningfully raise blood vitamin D
levels.”
About 70 percent of the participants had
less-than-optimal levels of vitamin D
when the study began; at baseline, the
mean blood level of vitamin D among the
study participants was 22.5 ng/mL. In
addition, 12 percent of the women were
at risk of vitamin D deficiency (blood
levels of less than 12 ng/mL).
The optimal circulating range of vitamin
D is thought to be between 20 and 50 ng/mL,
according to a recent data review
conducted by the Institute of Medicine,
which found that blood levels under 20
ng/mL are inadequate for bone health and
levels over 50 ng/mL are associated with
potential adverse effects, such as an
increased risk of developing kidney
stones.
Vitamin D is naturally found in some
foods, such as fatty fish, and is
produced within the body when skin is
exposed to sunlight. According to the
Institute of Medicine, just 10 minutes
of sun a day is enough to trigger
adequate vitamin D production. The
estimated average requirement via diet
or supplementation is 400 international
units per day for most adults.
“It is always best to discuss
supplementation with your doctor,
because circulating levels can vary a
lot depending on factors such as age,
weight, where you live, and how much
time you spend outdoors,” Mason said.
Vitamin D levels tend to decrease as
people age and are generally lower among
those with dark skin.
It is thought that obese and overweight
people have lower levels of vitamin D
because the nutrient is stored in fat
deposits. During weight loss, it is
suspected that the vitamin D that is
trapped in the fat tissue is released
into the blood and available for use
throughout the body.
“Vitamin D is found in several different
forms in the body and its pathways of
action are very complex, so the degree
to which vitamin D becomes available to
the body as a result of weight loss is
not well understood,” Mason cautioned.
A possible link between vitamin D
deficiency and chronic diseases,
including cancer and heart disease, is
also not well established.
“More
targeted research ongoing at the
Hutchinson Center and elsewhere aims to
better understand whether vitamin D
plays a specific role in the prevention
of these chronic diseases,” McTiernan
said. To that end, McTiernan is
recruiting Seattle-area obese and
overweight postmenopausal women for a
separate new study to assess the impact
of vitamin D on weight loss and breast
cancer risk factors.
The National Institutes of Health, the
National Cancer Institute and the
Canadian Institutes of Health funded the
research reported in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
The study also included investigators at
the University of Washington, the
University of Illinois at Chicago, the
University of British Columbia, Case
Western Reserve University, the
University of Minnesota, the National
Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical
School.
Note for media only: To obtain a copy of
the American Journal of Clinical
Nutrition paper, “Effects of Weight
Loss on Serum Vitamin D in
Postmenopausal Women,” please contact
the journal’s communications manager
Suzanne Price at sprice@nutrition.org or
301-634-7235.
Seattle women needed for vitamin D
study: Anne McTiernan, M.D. Ph.D.,
director of the Prevention Center at
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,
is leading a study, called the Vitamin
D, Diet and Activity Study, to evaluate
the effectiveness of vitamin D on weight
loss and breast cancer risk factors.
Seattle-area women who are 50 to 75 and
overweight may qualify to participate.
Eligible volunteers will meet regularly
with a nutrition expert to learn how to
make dietary changes to lose weight.
They will work out each week both on
their own and in the Prevention Center
gym and receive expert exercise advice.
They will also be assigned, by chance,
to receive a daily dose of vitamin D or
a placebo pill. More information can be
found here:
http://www.fhcrc.org/science/phs/vida/.
At Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
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including three Nobel laureates, bring a
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and to the world. www.fhcrc.org