Prevention of Rickets and Vitamin D Deficiency in Infants, Children, and Adolescents
Prevention of Rickets and Vitamin D Deficiency in Infants, Children, and Adolescents
Prevention of Rickets and Vitamin D Deficiency in Infants, Children, and Adolescents
Carol L. Wagner, MD, Frank R. Greer, MD, and the Section on Breastfeeding and Committee on Nutrition
ABSTRACT
Rickets in infants attributable to inadequate vitamin D intake and decreased
exposure to sunlight continues to be reported in the United States. There are
also concerns for vitamin D deficiency in older children and adolescents.
Because there are limited natural dietary sources of vitamin D and adequate
sunshine exposure for the cutaneous synthesis of vitamin D is not easily
determined for a given individual and may increase the risk of skin cancer, the
recommendations to ensure adequate vitamin D status have been revised to
include all infants, including those who are exclusively breastfed and older
children and adolescents. It is now recommended that all infants and children,
including adolescents, have a minimum daily intake of 400 IU of vitamin D
beginning soon after birth. The current recommendation replaces the previous
recommendation of a minimum daily intake of 200 IU/day of vitamin D
supplementation beginning in the first 2 months after birth and continuing
through adolescence. These revised guidelines for vitamin D intake for healthy
infants, children, and adolescents are based on evidence from new clinical trials
and the historical precedence of safely giving 400 IU of vitamin D per day in the
pediatric and adolescent population. New evidence supports a potential role for
vitamin D in maintaining innate immunity and preventing diseases such as
diabetes and cancer. The new data may eventually refine what constitutes
vitamin D sufficiency or deficiency. Pediatrics 2008;122:11421152
www.pediatrics.org/cgi/doi/10.1542/
peds.2008-1862
doi:10.1542/peds.2008-1862
All clinical reports from the American
Academy of Pediatrics automatically expire
5 years after publication unless reafrmed,
revised, or retired at or before that time.
The guidance in this report does not
indicate an exclusive course of treatment
or serve as a standard of medical care.
Variations, taking into account individual
circumstances, may be appropriate.
Key Words
vitamin D, vitamin D deciency, rickets,
vitamin D requirements, infants, children,
adolescents, 25-hydroxyvitamin D, vitamin
D supplements
Abbreviations
AAPAmerican Academy of Pediatrics
25-OH-D25-hydroxyvitamin D
1,25-OH2-D1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D
PTHparathyroid hormone
PEDIATRICS (ISSN Numbers: Print, 0031-4005;
Online, 1098-4275). Copyright 2008 by the
American Academy of Pediatrics
INTRODUCTION
This statement is intended to replace a 2003 clinical report from the American
Academy of Pediatrics (AAP),1 which recommended a daily intake of 200 IU/day
of vitamin D for all infants (beginning in the first 2 months after birth), children, and adolescents. The new
recommended daily intake of vitamin D is 400 IU/day for all infants, children, and adolescents beginning in the first
few days of life.
BACKGROUND
Rickets attributable to vitamin D deficiency is known to be a condition that is preventable with adequate nutritional
intake of vitamin D.26 Despite this knowledge, cases of rickets in infants attributable to inadequate vitamin D intake
and decreased exposure to sunlight continue to be reported in the United States and other Western countries,
particularly with exclusively breastfed infants and infants with darker skin pigmentation.4,714 Rickets, however, is not
limited to infancy and early childhood, as evidenced by cases of rickets caused by nutritional vitamin D deficiency
being reported in adolescents.15
Rickets is an example of extreme vitamin D deficiency, with a peak incidence between 3 and 18 months of age.
A state of deficiency occurs months before rickets is obvious on physical examination, and the deficiency state may
also present with hypocalcemic seizures,1618 growth failure, lethargy, irritability, and a predisposition to respiratory
infections during infancy.1622 In a retrospective review of children presenting with vitamin D deficiency in the United
Kingdom,16 there were 2 types of presentations. The first was symptomatic hypocalcemia (including seizures)
occurring during periods of rapid growth, with increased metabolic demands, long before any physical findings or
radiologic evidence of vitamin D deficiency occurred. The second clinical presentation was that of a more chronic
disease, with rickets and/or decreased bone mineralization and either normocalcemia or asymptomatic hypocalce1142
1143
and the risks of various skin cancers.100 Indirect epidemiologic evidence now suggests that the age at
which direct sunlight exposure is initiated is even
more important than the total sunlight exposure over
a lifetime in determining the risk of skin cancer.101105
Among dermatologists, there is active discussion
about the risks and potential benefits of sun exposure
and/or oral vitamin D supplementation97,99,106; however, the vast majority would agree with the current
AAP guidelines for decreasing sunlight exposure,
which include the advice that infants younger than 6
months should be kept out of direct sunlight. Although the AAP encourages physical activity and time
spent outdoors, childrens activities that minimize
sunlight exposure are preferred, and when outdoors,
protective clothing as well as sunscreens should be
used.105 In following these guidelines, vitamin D supplements during infancy, childhood, and adolescence
are necessary.
PREGNANCY, VITAMIN D, AND THE FETUS
The Institute of Medicine in 199751 and a Cochrane
review in 2002107 concluded that there are few data
available regarding maternal vitamin D requirements
during pregnancy, despite the fact that maternal vitamin
D concentrations largely determine the vitamin D status
of the fetus and newborn infant. With restricted vitamin
D intake and sunlight exposure, maternal deficiency
may occur, as has been documented in a number of
studies.107113
Recent work has demonstrated that in men and nonpregnant women, oral vitamin D intake over a 4- to
5-month period will increase circulating 25-OH-D concentrations by approximately 0.70 nmol/L for every 40
IU of vitamin D ingested,114,115 which is consistent with
earlier work performed in pregnant women. In those
studies, as predicted by vitamin D kinetics, supplements
of 1000 IU/day of vitamin D to pregnant women resulted
in a 12.5 to 15.0 nmol/L increase in circulating 25-OH-D
concentrations in both maternal and cord serum compared with nonsupplemented controls.108110 Maternal
25-OH-D concentrations ranged from a mean of approximately 25 nmol/L at baseline to 65 17.5 nmol/L at
230 days of gestation in the group of women who received 1000 IU of vitamin D per day during the last
trimester. In comparison, 25-OH-D concentrations
were 32.5 20.0 nmol/L in the unsupplemented
control group. These data suggest that doses exceeding
1000 IU of vitamin D per day are necessary to achieve
25-OH-D concentrations of 50 nmol/L in pregnant
women.108115 The significance of these findings for
those who care for the pediatric population is that
when a woman who has vitamin D deficiency gives
birth, her neonate also will be deficient.
It is important to note that women with increased
skin pigmentation or who have little exposure of their
skin to sunlight are at a greater risk of vitamin D deficiency and may need additional vitamin D supplements,
especially during pregnancy and lactation.71 In a study
by van der Meer et al,116 50% of pregnant women with
darker pigmentation in the Netherlands were vitamin D
1145
TABLE 2 Oral Vitamin D Preparations Currently Available in the United States (in Alphabetical Order)
Preparationa
Dosage
Note that higher-dose oral preparations may be necessary for the treatment of those with rickets in the rst few months of therapy or for patients with chronic diseases such as fat
malabsorption (cystic brosis) or patients chronically taking medications that interfere with vitamin D metabolism (such as antiseizure medications).
a A study by Martinez et al162 showed that newborn and older infants preferred oil-based liquid preparations to alcohol-based preparations.
b Single-drop preparation may be better tolerated in patients with oral aversion issues, but proper instruction regarding administration of these drops must be given to the parents or care
provider, given the increased risk of toxicity, incorrect dosing, or accidental ingestion.
c The cost of vitamin D only preparations may be more than multivitamin preparations and could be an issue for health clinics that dispense vitamins to infants and children. The
multivitamin preparation was the only preparation available until recently; therefore, there is a comfort among practitioners in dispensing multivitamins to all age groups.
ticularly in the winter months when mothers have marginal vitamin D status or are deficient, (3) that the
amount of sunshine exposure necessary to maintain an
adequate 25-OH-D concentration in any given infant at
any point in time is not easy to determine, and (4) serum
25-OH-D concentrations are maintained at 50 nmol/L
in breastfed infants with 400 IU of vitamin D per day, the
following recommendation is made: A supplement of
400 IU/day of vitamin D should begin within the first
few days of life and continue throughout childhood. Any
breastfeeding infant, regardless of whether he or she is
being supplemented with formula, should be supplemented with 400 IU of vitamin D, because it is unlikely
that a breastfed infant would consume 1 L (1 qt) of
formula per day, the amount that would supply 400 IU
of vitamin D.
FORMS OF VITAMIN D SUPPLEMENTS
There are 2 forms of vitamin D that have been used as
supplements: vitamin D2 (ergocalciferol, which is plant
derived) and vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol, which is fish
derived). It has been shown that vitamin D3 has greater
efficacy in raising circulating 25-OH-D concentrations
under certain physiological situations.144 Most fortified
milk products and vitamin supplements now contain
vitamin D3. Vitamin D only preparations are now available in the United States, in addition to the multivitamin
liquids supplements, to provide the appropriate concentrations of 400 IU/mL (see Table 2). Some also contain
400 IU per drop, but such preparations must be prescribed with caution; explicit instruction and demonstration of use are essential because of the greater potential
for a vitamin D overdose if several drops are administered at once.
The new vitamin D only preparations are particularly appropriate for the breastfed infant who has no
need for multivitamin supplements. The cost of purchase
and administration of vitamin D either alone or in combination with vitamins A and C (as it is currently constituted) is minimal. Pediatricians and other health care
professionals should work with the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children
1147
4. On the basis of the available evidence, serum 25OH-D concentrations in infants and children should
be 50 nmol/L (20 ng/mL).
5. Children with increased risk of vitamin D deficiency,
such as those with chronic fat malabsorption and
those chronically taking antiseizure medications, may
continue to be vitamin D deficient despite an intake
of 400 IU/day. Higher doses of vitamin D supplementation may be necessary to achieve normal vitamin D
status in these children, and this status should be
determined with laboratory tests (eg, for serum 25OH-D and PTH concentrations and measures of bonemineral status). If a vitamin D supplement is prescribed, 25-OH-D levels should be repeated at
3-month intervals until normal levels have been
achieved. PTH and bone-mineral status should be
monitored every 6 months until they have normalized.
6. Pediatricians and other health care professionals
should strive to make vitamin D supplements readily
available to all children within their community, especially for those children most at risk.
COMMITTEE ON NUTRITION, 20072008
Jatinder J. S. Bhatia, MD
Committee on Nutrition
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