Vitamin D intakes among women living with and without HIV in Canada

  • University of British Columbia ROR
  • Women's Health Research Institute ROR
  • McGill University ROR
  • Simon Fraser University ROR
  • B.C. Women's Hospital & Health Centre ROR
  • Vancouver Hospital and Health Sciences Centre ROR

HIV Medicine, 24(5), 628-639

DOI 10.1111/hiv.13454 PMID 36597960

Abstract

Background

Patterns of vitamin D intake are relatively unexplored among women living with HIV, despite its importance for women's health. We compared vitamin D dietary and supplement intakes in women with HIV and population-based national controls and investigated barriers to intake.

Methods

In this case-control study, women with HIV in the Children and Women: AntiRetrovirals and Markers of Aging (CARMA) cohort were matched with Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study (CaMos) controls. Participants were queried for vitamin D in dairy consumption, supplementation/dosage, and sociodemographic variables. We assessed barriers to supplementation and factors associated with dietary intake by regression modelling.

Results

Ninety-five women living with HIV were age-matched to 284 controls. Women with HIV had lower income and bone mineral density and were more likely to smoke, take multiple medications and be non-white. Vitamin D dietary intake was lower in women living with HIV versus controls [0.76 vs. 1.79 μg/day; adjusted odds ratio (aOR) for greater than or equal to median intake 0.29 (0.12-0.61), p = 0.002], but any supplementation was higher [62.2% vs. 44.7%; aOR = 3.44 (95% CI: 1.16-11.00), p = 0.03]. Total vitamin D intake was similar between groups. Smoking was associated with no supplementation; non-white ethnicity and low income were related to lower dietary intake.

Conclusions

Women living with HIV showed lower dietary vitamin D intake but higher supplementation rates, suggesting that care providers are promoting supplementation. Women living with HIV who smoke, have low incomes and are non-white may particularly benefit from targeted efforts to improve vitamin D intake.

Topics

vitamin D intake women living with HIV Canada, Prior JC vitamin D women's health cohort study, HIV women dietary vitamin D supplementation bone density, vitamin D deficiency barriers HIV positive women, CARMA cohort vitamin D dietary supplement intake, Canadian Multicentre Osteoporosis Study CaMos vitamin D women, smoking ethnicity income vitamin D supplementation barriers, bone mineral density HIV women vitamin D intake, case-control study vitamin D dairy consumption HIV, vitamin D supplementation promotion HIV care providers
PMID 36597960 36597960 DOI 10.1111/hiv.13454 10.1111/hiv.13454

Cite this article

King, E. M., Swann, S. A., Prior, J. C., Berger, C., Mayer, U., Pick, N., Campbell, A. R., Côté, H. C. F., Murray, M. C. M., & CIHR team on Cellular Aging and HIV Comorbidities in Women and Children (CARMA) (2023). Vitamin D intakes among women living with and without HIV in Canada. *HIV medicine*, *24*(5), 628-639. https://doi.org/10.1111/hiv.13454