# Vitamin D deficiency and pregnancy outcomes: LC-MS/MS-based evaluation in Southwest China

**Authors:** Mao Zheng, Yali Wang, Ning Zou, Jianfei E., Yu Zou

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fmed.2025.1711506 · 2026-01-22

## TL;DR

This study in Southwest China finds that vitamin D deficiency is common in pregnant women and is linked to specific pregnancy outcomes, with vitamin D3 being more effective for supplementation.

## Contribution

The study uses gold-standard LC-MS/MS to evaluate vitamin D deficiency in pregnancy and identifies new associations with hypothyroidism and preterm birth.

## Key findings

- 62.5% of pregnant women in Deyang had vitamin D deficiency (<20 ng/ml).
- Early pregnancy deficiency was linked to gestational hypothyroidism (OR = 1.32).
- Late pregnancy deficiency was inversely correlated with preterm birth (OR = 0.32).

## Abstract

Vitamin D insufficiency is a global public health concern, particularly among Chinese pregnant women, yet southwest-China data using gold-standard LC-MS/MS are scarce.

A retrospective cohort study was conducted on 2,742 pregnancies delivered in Deyang. Serum 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 quantified by LC-MS/MS (CV < 7%). Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses were used to identify risk factors for vitamin D deficiency and assess its associations with pregnancy outcomes. Efficacy of vitamin D supplementation was also compared.

The median serum 25(OH)D concentration was 16.3 ng/ml, with 62.5% of participants classified as vitamin D deficient (<20 ng/ml). Early pregnancy (≤12 weeks) carried 3.37-fold higher deficiency risk than late pregnancy (≥25 weeks). Early deficiency was associated with gestational hypothyroidism (OR = 1.32, P = 0.048). Paradoxically, late deficiency inversely correlated with preterm birth (OR = 0.32, P = 0.014). One-month supplementation: D3-800 IU raised 25(OH)D by +28.4 ng/ml, outperforming D2-800 IU (+14.6 ng/ml, P < 0.001).

Vitamin D deficiency affects three-fifths of gravidae in Deyang. Early pregnancy represents the highest-risk window and predicts hypothyroidism. Late deficiency unexpectedly linked to lower preterm birth warrants causal clarification. D3 is the preferred supplement.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** 25(OH)D3 (PubChem CID 5283731), vitamin D3 (PubChem CID 5280795), vitamin D2 (PubChem CID 5280793)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** preterm birth (MESH:D047928), gestational hypothyroidism (MESH:D007037), Late (MESH:D000067562), Vitamin D (MESH:D014808)
- **Chemicals:** vitamin D (MESH:D014807), D3 (MESH:D002762), 25(OH)D (-), D2 (MESH:C091377)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12872777/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12872777