Systematic Review of Vitamin D and Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy
- PMID: 29494538
- PMCID: PMC5872712
- DOI: 10.3390/nu10030294
Systematic Review of Vitamin D and Hypertensive Disorders of Pregnancy
Abstract
This narrative systematic review evaluates growing evidence of an association between low maternal vitamin D status and increased risk of hypertensive disorders. The inclusion of interventional, observational, and dietary studies on vitamin D and all hypertensive disorders of pregnancy is a novel aspect of this review, providing a unique contribution to an intensively-researched area that still lacks a definitive conclusion. To date, trial evidence supports a protective effect of combined vitamin D and calcium supplementation against preeclampsia. Conflicting data for an association of vitamin D with gestational hypertensive disorders in observational studies arises from a number of sources, including large heterogeneity between study designs, lack of adherence to standardized perinatal outcome definitions, variable quality of analytical data for 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D), and inconsistent data reporting of vitamin D status. While evidence does appear to lean towards an increased risk of gestational hypertensive disorders at 25(OH)D concentrations <50 nmol/L, caution should be exercised with dosing in trials, given the lack of data on long-term safety. The possibility that a fairly narrow target range for circulating 25(OH)D for achievement of clinically-relevant improvements requires further exploration. As hypertension alone, and not preeclampsia specifically, limits intrauterine growth, evaluation of the relationship between vitamin D status and all terms of hypertension in pregnancy is a clinically relevant area for research and should be prioritised in future randomised trials.
Keywords: 25-hydroxyvitamin D; gestational hypertension; preeclampsia; vitamin D.
Conflict of interest statement
The authors declare no conflict of interest. The founding sponsors had no role in the collection or interpretation of the data, in the writing of the manuscript or in the decision to publish this review.
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