Analysis of Vitamin D and Vitamin B12 Status during the First Trimester of Pregnancy in a Tertiary Care Centre

Authors

Sahil Raj

Department of Biochemistry, Santosh Medical College and Santosh Deemed to Be University (India)

Dr. Juhi Aggarwal

Department of Biochemistry, Santosh Medical College and Santosh Deemed to Be University (India)

Urvashi Midha

Department of Biochemistry, Santosh Medical College and Santosh Deemed to Be University (India)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.13020048

Subject Category: Biochemistry

Volume/Issue: 13/2 | Page No: 550-554

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-02-08

Accepted: 2026-02-16

Published: 2026-02-26

Abstract

Vitamin D and vitamin B12 are essential micronutrients with distinct but complementary roles in maternal and fetal health. Vitamin D regulates calcium and phosphate homeostasis, supports fetal skeletal development, and modulates immune function; deficiency during pregnancy has been linked to complications including pre-eclampsia, gestational diabetes, preterm birth and impaired fetal bone mineralization. [1,2] Despite abundant sunlight in many regions of India, multiple studies and reviews have documented a high prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency and deficiency among pregnant women, driven by limited sun exposure, skin pigmentation, cultural clothing practices, urban lifestyles and low dietary intake of vitamin D-rich foods. [3,4,5] Vitamin B12 is a key cofactor in one-carbon metabolism required for DNA synthesis, methylation reactions and neural development. Maternal B12 deficiency is associated with neural tube defects, intrauterine growth restriction and adverse neuro-developmental outcomes in offspring. [6,7] India shows a high burden of maternal B12 deficiency in many cohorts, particularly among vegetarians and low-income populations lacking regular animal-source foods. [8,9] Global and national guidance acknowledges the importance of assessing maternal micronutrient status. The World Health Organization's antenatal care guidance reviews vitamin D supplementation and notes potential benefits for maternal serum status and some pregnancy outcomes while not recommending universal supplementation for all pregnant women without risk stratification.[10] Indian antenatal protocol sand dietary guidelines (ICMR/NIN) emphasize micronutrient support during pregnancy, including calcium with vitamin D in antenatal management where indicated. [11] Given the regional variability and population-specific risk factors, point-prevalence studies of vitamin D and B12 during early pregnancy are valuable to inform screening and supplementation strategies. This study aims to examine the prevalence of vitamin D and vitamin B 12 status during the first trimester among pregnant women attending a tertiary care center in North India, and to explore associations between these two micronutrients and demographic factors.

Keywords

A Cross-sectional study performed at Santosh Medical College

Downloads

References

1. Holick MF. Vitamin D deficiency. N Engl J Med. 2007;357(3):266–281. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

2. Mithal A, Wahl DA, Bonjour JP, et al. Global vitamin D status and determinants of hypovitaminosis D. Osteoporos Int. 2009;20(11):1807–1820. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

3. Jeyakumar A, et al. Pooled estimate of vitamin D deficiency among pregnant women. J Health Popul Nutr. 2021. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

4. Abdelmageed RM, et al. Prospective cohort study of vitamin D deficiency in pregnancy. 2024. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

5. World Health Organization. Nutritionalinterventionsupdate: vitamin Dsupplements duringpregnancy.WHO.29July2020.(WHO guidancereview) [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

6. Behere RV,Yajnik CS.Maternal VitaminB12 status during pregnancy and its long-term effects. FrontEndocrinol.2021. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

7. FinkelsteinJ L,et al.Maternal vitamin 12 deficiency and perinatal outcomes. PLoSOne. 2021. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

8. Barney AM, et al. Prevalence of Vitamin B12 deficiency in pregnancy in India. 2020. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

9. ICMR/NIN. Antenatal Management guidelines. Indian Council of Medical Research. (Antenatal protocol PDF) [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

10. National Institute of Nutrition, ICMR. Dietary Guidelines for Indians, 2024. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

11. Rogne T, et al. Associations of maternal vitaminB12 withpretermbirthandlowbirthweight: systematicreview.AmJEpidemiol.2017. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

12. Nindrea RD, etal. Prevalence of vitamin D deficiency among pregnant women in SE Asia. 2024. Vitamin B12 status in women of reproductive age. 2021. [Google Scholar] [Crossref]

Metrics

Views & Downloads

Similar Articles