Vitamin D deficiency in South-East Asian children: a systematic review

Author:

Oktaria VickaORCID,Putri Dwi Astuti DharmaORCID,Ihyauddin ZulfikarORCID,Julia MadarinaORCID,Sulistyoningrum Dian CaturiniORCID,Koon Poh BeeORCID,Danchin MargaretORCID,Murni Indah KartikaORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveTo describe the prevalence and determinants of vitamin D deficiency (VDD) among healthy children aged between 0 and 18 years living in South-East Asia (SEA).DesignWe systematically searched Ovid MEDLINE and Ovid EMBASE for observational studies assessing VDD among healthy children in the SEA region as the primary or secondary outcome from database inception to 6 April 2021. PubMed was used for e-pubs and publications not indexed in Medline. Publications that included abstracts in English were included. We performed a systematic review to describe the prevalence of VDD in SEA children.ResultsOur initial search identified 550 publications with an additional 2 publications from manual screening. Of those, 21 studies from 5 different countries (Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia) were summarised and included in forest plots. The prevalence of VDD (<50 nmol/L) ranged from 0.9% to 96.4%, with >50% of newborns having VDD, and severe VDD (<30 nmol/L) ranged from 0% to 55.8%. Female sex and urban living were the most common determinants of VDD.ConclusionsVDD among healthy children living in the SEA region is common. Efforts to detect VDD and the implementation of preventive measures, including education on safe sun exposure and oral vitamin D supplementation or food fortification, should be considered for key target groups, including adolescent females and pregnant and lactating women to improve the vitamin D status of newborns.Protocol registration numberThis study is registered with PROSPERO (CRD42020181600).

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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