Nutrition & Metabolism

official impact factor 2.35

Open Access Highly Access Research

The effect of calcium and vitamin D supplementation on obesity in postmenopausal women: secondary analysis for a large-scale, placebo controlled, double-blind, 4-year longitudinal clinical trial

Jiapeng Zhou1,2, Lan-Juan Zhao3,2*, Patrice Watson2, Qin Zhang1 and Joan M Lappe2

Author Affiliations

1 Key Laboratory of Animal Genetics and Breeding of the Ministry of Agriculture, College of Animal Science and Technology, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China

2 Osteoporosis Research Center, Creighton University Medical Center, Omaha, NE, USA

3 Department of Biomedical Sciences, Creighton University Medical Center, Omaha, NE, USA

For all author emails, please log on.

Nutrition & Metabolism 2010, 7:62 doi:10.1186/1743-7075-7-62

Published: 23 July 2010

Abstract

Background

It is undetermined whether calcium supplementation has an effect on obesity or body composition in postmenopausal women. The purpose of the study is to detect the effect of calcium supplementation on indices of obesity and body composition.

Methods

This is a secondary analysis of data from a population-based, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial designed to determine the effects of calcium and vitamin D on osteoporotic fractures. The cohort included 1179 postmenopausal women who were randomly assigned into one of three groups: 1) supplemental calcium (1400 mg/d or 1500 mg/d) plus vitamin D placebo (Ca-only group); 2) supplemental calcium (1400 mg/d or 1500 mg/d) plus supplemental vitamin D3 (1100 IU/d) (Ca + D group); or, 3) two placebos (placebo group). After applying the exclusion criteria for this analysis, 870 subjects were included in this study. The primary outcomes for the present study were changes in body mass index, trunk fat, trunk lean, and percentage of trunk fat after calcium supplementation.

Results

Changes in trunk fat, trunk lean, and percentage of trunk fat were significantly different between the calcium intervention groups (Ca-only group or Ca + D group) and the placebo group during the trial (P < 0.05). The calcium intervention groups gained less trunk fat and maintained more trunk lean when compared to the placebo group. No significant difference was observed for body mass index between groups.

Conclusion

Calcium supplementation over four years has a beneficial effect on body composition in postmenopausal women.