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Background: Tracking the prevalence of imbalances for essential nutrients over time provides insight into nutritional status changes and highlights vulnerabilities of demographic subgroups. Consolidated information for a broad range of biomarkers in the US population is missing. Objectives: We aimed to describe nutritional deficiency and excess prevalence trends for 12 biomarkers of water- and fat-soluble vitamins and iron status in the US population participating in the NHANES 1999-2023 after adjusting for demographic changes over time. Methods: We estimated the prevalence of deficiency (vitamins A, B-6, B-12, C, D, and E, as well as iron), insufficiency vitamins B-6, B-9 (folate), B-12, C, and D, and excess (vitamins A and D as well as iron). We assessed trends as overall change in prevalence using logistic regression (unadjusted and adjusted for age, sex, and race/Hispanic origin) and as linear trend (if overall change was significant). Results: After adjusting for demographic changes, we observed small (typically 125 nmol/L) increased from <1% to 8.06% in persons ≥6 y, with the highest prevalence in adult subgroups (16.2% in supplement users, 13.2% in females, and 12.3% in non-Hispanic White persons). Conclusions: The large increases in excess 25OHD concentrations and modest increases in low ferritin and RBF concentrations merit attention and highlight the importance of providing gold standard data to continuously monitor the nutritional status of the US population and of subpopulations.
Pfeiffer et al. (Thu,) studied this question.