William B. Grant, PhD
Very brief summary
- 1) Physicians do not have enough time to read the new developments
- Too much new information. Time for medical knowlege to double had been 7 years, by 2020 it is predicted to be 0.2 years
- 2) Physicians are reluctant to change
VitaminDWiki
- 17 reasons why are doctors reluctant to accept vitamin D
- Cancer not treated by Vitamin D when ignore dose size, type, and length of trial – meta-analysis April 2018
- Overview Cancer and vitamin D which had the following old chart
Cancer category of VitaminDWiki starts with the following
- Cancer
295 items Overview Cancer and vitamin D - Cancer and Vitamin D - many studies
- After Cancer Diagnosis
114 items - Bladder Cancer
28 items - Breast Cancer
259 items Overview Breast Cancer and Vitamin D - Colon Cancer
145 items Overview Cancer-Colon and vitamin D - Leukemia
19 items - Liver Cancer
17 items - Lung Cancer
55 items Overview Lung cancer and vitamin D - Lymphoma Cancer
26 items - Other Cancer
66 items - Ovarian Cancer
26 items - Pancreatic Cancer
58 items - Prostate Cancer
103 items Overview Prostate Cancer and Vitamin D - Skin Cancer
121 items Overview Suntan, melanoma and vitamin D - Childhood Cancers - Vitamin D can help - many studies
- Easiest way to treat cancer – take Vitamin D – Nov 2022
- 13 Cancers are helped by Vitamin D – Biobank July 2023
- 2X increase of 14 cancers in non-seniors in 20 years (low vitamin D) – Sept 2022
- Vitamin D prevents and treats cancer in many ways – May 2021
- Those with recent cancer diagnosis had 7X increased risk of COVID-19 (more if A-A )- Dec 2020
- Deaths from many types of Cancer associated with low vitamin D- review of meta-analyses Sept 2020
- Cancer incidence and mortality is decreased if 40-60 ng of Vitamin D – April 2019
- 8 ways that Cancer might be prevented by Vitamin D - June 2019
- Cancer stem cells and Vitamin D - many studies
- Vitamin D Reduces Cancer Risk - Why Scientists Accept It but Physicians Do Not - Feb 2019
- Overview of Vitamin D Actions in Cancer – 31 page chapter in a book – 2018
- Vitamin D prevents breast cancer, reduces BC mortality, and reduces BC chemotherapy problems – Sept 2018
- Diagnosed with breast cancer – take vitamin D to cut chance of death by half – July 2018
- Melanoma 25 X more likely if low vitamin D – Feb 2018
- Better Cancer survival if higher vitamin D a decade earlier (esp. Melanoma, Kidney, Prostate)– Aug 2018
295 Cancer articles - wiki page:
- Vitamins fight cancer: 9 of the 10 most cited studies were for Vitamin D - Dec 2024
- Vitamin D Roles - more than just help the immune system
- Vitamin D for all senior Germans would cost-effectively prevent 30,000 cancer deaths annually - March 2021
- Obese person with a cancer is 1.7 X higher risk of subsequent Kidney Cancer (low vitamin D) - Oct 2024
- Cancer prevention starts with 30 ng of Vitamin D – Sept 2024
- Incidence of many cancers increased 1.5 X in a generation – June 2024
- Vitamin D might be fighting some cancers by increasing good microbiota – May 2024
- Cancers take years to develop, but already have 36 COVID vaccination suspected cancers - May 2024
- Cancers are prevented by Vitamins D etc (Gynecological Cancer in this case) – May 2024
- Fewer deaths (All-cause, Cardiovascular, Cancer) when Vitamin D levels are above 36 ng – April 2024
- More Evidence Showing Vitamin D Combats Cancer - Mercola May 2024
- 23 Cancers in the US are associated with low UVB - Grant April 2024
- Vitamin D can be inside of a “trojan horse” nanoball made of folate, Cancer cells attrack folate – April 2024
- Keytruda (175,000 dollars per year) fights some cancers, Vitamin D reduces how much Keytruda is needed
- Magnesium and Cancer - many studies
- The Science of Magnesium and Its Role in Aging and Disease - Patrick March 2024
- Most Common Cancers per country
- Increased risk of early-onset Solid Cancer if family member had one: 7.3X if black, 3 X if white – June 2021
- 30% increase in early-onset cancers expected in a decade – March 2023
- Calcium often reduces the risk of health problems such as Colorectal Cancer – March 2024
- Vitamin D: Viral infections, Infectious diseases, EBV and MS, Virus and Cancers – Grant March 2024
- Predicted US Cancer statistics for 2024 - Feb 2024
- Vitamin D and Cancer - Jan 2024
- Vitamin D and Cancer (portions of a book chapter) - Jan 2024
- Childhood Cancers - Vitamin D can help - many studies
- 79% increase in cancer under age 50 in 3 decades - Sept 2023
- People with Cancer having more than 30 ng of Vitamin D are 40% less likely to die (of any cause) – Nov 2023
- Cancers reduced after 2 years of 2000 IU Vitamin D daily (2nd RCT) – RCT Aug
- Much more likely to survive cancer if more than 20 ng of Vitamin D - Oct 2023
- Cancer Metabolism might be fought by many things – such as vitamin D – Oct 2023
- Multiple COVID vaccinations might increase Cancer Incidence - many studies
- Vitamin D fortification in Europe preventing 27,000 Cancer deaths, could prevent 129,000 – May 2022
- Vitamin D restricts new capillary growth (angiogenesis) in fat and cancers
- 13 Cancers are helped by Vitamin D – Biobank July 2023
- Global burden of brain disorders surpasses cardiovascular disease and cancer - July 2023
- Cancer Treatments - vitamin D is one of the 30 alternatives - June 2023
- Inflammation associated with Cancer reduced by Vitamin D – meta-analysis May 2023
- 11 cancers fought by Vitamin D - mini review April 2023
- Vitamin K2 fights Breast and some other cancers - many studies
- 100 years since the discovery of Vitamin D - 23 studies - 2022, 2023
- Restore your Vitamin D levels before surgery (Gastric Cancer in this case) - Jan 2023
- Only 1 in 7 cancers are found by screening (but 2 in 7 are prevented by Vitamin D) – Dec 2022
- Cancers fought by Garlic, Onion, and Sulfur - several studies
- Cancer incidence or mortality not changed by small Vitamin D doses: 2021-2023
- Cancer and Vitamin D - many studies
- 3,200 IU of daily not help much in population already having 30 ng of Vitamin D – RCT Jan 2022
- 2X increase of 14 cancers in non-seniors in 20 years (low vitamin D) – Sept 2022
- USPSTF says no evidence that Vitamins prevent CVD or Cancer (data disagrees) Aug 2022
- Cancers are associated with low vitamin D, poor vaccination response and perhaps poor VDR – July 2022
- Poor prognosis of solid childhood cancers 14.7 X more likely with a poor Vitamin D Receptor – July 2022
- 500 IU of vitamin D does not reduce the risk of Obesity-related Cancers – June 2022
- COVID, Cancer, etc. are Vitamin D low-hanging-fruit – Editorial June 2022
- Cancer mortality reduced 40 pcnt by 2000 IU Vitamin D daily if normal weight – Meta-analysis June 2022
- Vitamin K2-7 helps bone, blood vessels, cancer, diabetes, etc. – June 2022
- Interview with transcript of Dr. Grant on Vitamin D and Cancer by Dr. Moss - June 2022
- Newly diagnosed Children with Cancer have low vitamin D, especially if black - May 2022
- Changes in CYP3A4 gene affects Vitamin D, health, reactions to some drugs, etc - June 2022
- Vitamin D fortification could eliminate 1 in 10 Cancer deaths in the EU – May 2022
- Many cancers reduce oxygen to protect themselves in 6 ways. Vitamin D stops all 6 ways – March 2022
- 23 Cancers if little sun, 12 of which have been associated with low vitamin D – March 2022
- Cancer of the eye in children: most of the risk factors are associated with low vitamin D – July 2021
- Vitamin D probably has a Role in Cancer, CVD, and COVID - video and transcript Dec 1, 2021
- Cancers and Vitamin D Receptors, including change with race – Feb 2021
- Needing a high level of vitamin D is a good clue that the Vitamin D Receptor is deactivated
- Cancer incidence and death reduced by both Vitamin D and UVB – Grant Oct 2021
- Cancer mortality not reduced by small vitamin D doses - Sept 2021
- Virus cause some cancers
- Cancer death (non-skin) 2.3 X more likely if low Vitamin D – Aug 2021
- Children's Cancer hospital now testing vitamin D frequently and supplementing weekly – July 2021
- Consensus recommends at least 20 ng of Vitamin D for childhood cancer (not nearly enough) – June 2021
- Cancer during childhood - many studies
- Vitamin D prevents and treats cancer in many ways – May 2021
- Increased cancer risk from night shift (and many others- low vitamin D) - April 2021
- Some cancer rates are reduced when live at high altitude, but other cancers increase after a few generations – March 2021
- 2,000 IU of Vitamin D daily to German Seniors would save 30,000 lives a year – March 2021
- Vitamin D appears to reduce energy to cancer cells in several ways – March 2021
- 26 health factors increase the risk of COVID-19 – all are proxies for low vitamin D
- Those with recent cancer diagnosis had 7X increased risk of COVID-19 (more if A-A )- Dec 2020
- Vitamin D Receptor (Cancers OR Viruses) - many studies
- Book: Sunlight, UV, Vitamin D and Receptor, Skin and other Cancers - Dec 2020
- 2,000 IU of vitamin D and Omega-3 reduced Cancer death rate bv 40% (normal weight) – VITAL RCT Nov 2020
- Deaths from many types of Cancer associated with low vitamin D- review of meta-analyses Sept 2020
- Vitamin D fights 13 cancers – review of 35 meta-analyses – Oct 2020
- Live 7 years longer free of major disease if eat well, not smoke, not obese, moderate drink and exercise (100,000 people) – Jan 2020
- How cancer is fought by Vitamin D (Ovarian this time) – Feb 2020
- More Cancer if less sun – model adding climate helps (need additional factors) – Nov 2019
- 8 ways that Cancer might be prevented by Vitamin D - June 2019
- Cancer is leading cause of death - Vitamin D and Receptor activators help
- Childhood Cancer survivors – only 1 in 25 had consumed Vitamin D RDA – Oct 2019
- Vitamin D Supplements Reduce Cancer Mortality – Greger Sept 2019
- Exercise reduces cancer deaths, Magnesium RDA reduces deaths even more – Aug 2019
- The Vitamin That Cuts Cancer Risk 13 Percent - July 2019
- Children with cancer were deficient in Vitamin D, Vitamin C, and Zinc – July 2019
- Mortality increased: 4X Cancer, 5X Diabetes if eat a lot of meat protein – March 2014
- People supplemented with Vitamin D had 13 percent fewer Cancer deaths – Meta-analysis of RCT June 2019
- Women with diabetes 60 percent more likely to get Cancer (perhaps low vitamin D) – May 2019
- Cancer incidence and mortality is decreased if 40-60 ng of Vitamin D – April 2019
- The sun appears to generate Co-Q10 in our bodies when we eat our greens – Greger April 2016
- Omega-3 reduces side effects of Cancer treatments – April 2019
- Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma 20 percent more likely if low UV – meta-analysis April 2019
- The Role of Resveratrol in Cancer Therapy – Dec 2017
- Cancer stem cells and Vitamin D - many studies
- A poor Vitamin D Receptor is associated with many cancers (oral cancer in this case) – Jan 2019
- Overview of Vitamin D Actions in Cancer – 31 page chapter in a book – 2018
- Increased incidence of 7 cancers if live far from equator (if not take vitamin D) – March 2019
- Cancer with low Vitamin D increases Mortality by 13 percent – meta-analysis Feb 2019
- Vitamin D Reduces Cancer Risk - Why Scientists Accept It but Physicians Do Not - Feb 2019
- Rates of some newly diagnosed Cancers increased with higher Vitamin D (217,000 Danes) – Jan 2019
- Better Cancer survival if higher vitamin D a decade earlier (esp. Melanoma, Kidney, Prostate)– Aug 2018
- Cancer treatment by Vitamin D sometimes is restricted by genes – Oct 2018
- Fight Cancer with more than cut, burn, and poison – Nobel prize for T-Cell – Oct 2018
- Importance of Vitamin K – Pizzorno – July 2018
- Active Vitamin D level should not be used for Prospective Studies of Cancer – Aug 2018
- Both Vitamin D and Vitamin C fight cancers and aid anticancer drugs – May 2018
- Embrace the Sun – benefits of the sun (Nitric Oxide etc.) – book June 2018
- Active vitamin D appears to treat cancer – more studies needed – June 2018
- Vitamin D receptor is essential for both normal and cancerous cells in the lab – June 2018
- Vitamin K2 appears to treat some cancers – April 2018
- Muscle pain (Low Magnesium) plus Low Vitamin D associated with 10X more Cancer, etc (San Francisco) – Aug 2017
- Cancer not treated by Vitamin D when ignore dose size, type, and length of trial – meta-analysis April 2018
- Active Vitamin D reduces Ovarian Cancer stem cells growth by 4X (via Vitamin D receptor in lab rat) – March 2018
- Half of dogs now get cancer, it used to be just 1 percent (probably low Vitamin D)
- Evidence that Vitamin D prevents Cancer – Grant Feb 2018
- Oral Contraceptives (which increase Vitamin D) reduce the risk of some cancers – Jan 2018
- Bone fractures 2.8 X more likely among cancer survivors (perhaps low vitamin D) – Dec 2017
- Childhood cancer survivors have increased chronic health problems as adults – Sept 2017
- Cancer and the Vitamin D Receptor, a primer – Sept 2017
- Magnesium in Healthcare (Rickets, Stones, Pregnancy, Depression, etc.) with level of evidence – Sept 2017
- Prostate Cancer treatment (Vitamin D, Omega-3, Tumeric) RCT ending Dec 2018
- Dogs with Cancer have low vitamin D, same as humans – Sept 2017
- Omega-3 prevents and treats several cancers – Sept 2017
- Cancer risks and Vitamin D Receptors – association is unclear – 2017
- Modeling Cancer RCTs – including Breast Cancer – April 2017
- Cancer 4 times more likely if low vitamin D (in dogs) – 2016
- Ethical challenge – giving vitamin D to only half of Cancer (etc) patients – Jan 2017
- Vitamin D, Vitamin D Receptor and Cancer – Nov 2016
- Hypothesis: Vitamin D treating of breast and other cancers may be via CCN genes – Oct 2016
- Cancer risk in older women reduced 32 percent by 2,000 IU of Vitamin D plus Calcium – 4 year RCT Oct 2016
- Risk of Cancer increased if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis of 73 studies Jan 2016
- Obesity linked to 13 cancers, the linkage is probably vitamin D – Aug 2016
- Cancer and Vitamin D – PhD dissertation 2015
- Vitamin D and cancer – epidemiological association with colon and breast – Sept 2014
- Adaptive immunity (cancer, viruses, autoimmune) and vitamin D – April 2016
- If you were born after 1960 your risk of getting cancer is 1 in 2 if you do not get a lot of vitamin D
- Cancer risk and survival improved by increasing vitamin D or UVB – April 2016
- Cancer risk reduced 65 percent by vitamin D levels greater than 40 nanograms – April 2016
- 'Cancer Screening Has Never Saved Lives' (but Vitamin D supplementation does) - Jan 2016
- Off topic – More money to be made in TREATING cancer than PREVENTING it – NYT Dec 2015
- Dog Cancer 4X more likely if low Vitamin D – Nov 2015
- Vitamin D does not improve cancer survival much – when dose size, etc. is ignored – Oct 2015
- The health benefits of vitamin K – Oct 2015
- Cancer risk weakly associated with vitamin D-binding protein – meta-analysis Sept 2015
- Vitamin D and receptor reduce carcinogenic effects of pollutants – July 2015
- Cancer treated better when active vitamin d (calcitriol) is inside of PLGA nanoparticles – June 2015
- How active vitamin D (Calcitriol) deals with cancer – June 2015
- Cancer - far less for outdoor workers
- Obesity causes 20 percent of all cancer, low vitamin D may be the connection – meta-analysis - Sept 2014
- Opioid use in palliative cancer patients far less if high level of vitamin D – May 2015
- Cancer deaths strongly related to low vitamin D if sampled near time of diagnosis – Feb 2012
- Cancer deaths of senior women 60 percent more likely if low Vitamin D – March 2015
- Photodynamic Therapy used to kill cancer in mice was improved 4X by Vitamin D – Feb 2015
- Cancer – will 4,000 IU of vitamin D daily help in one month (no) – VIDAFACT Dec 2014
- Cancer and active Vitamin D – in Spanish – Nov 2014
- Cancer, Sunlight, and Vitamin D - Holick Oct 2014
- Off Topic: Cannabinoids as Cancer chemotherapy – Sept 2014
- Obesity increases Cancer - perhaps due to low vitamin D - many articles
- Off topic: Oncologists paid 350 dollars per patient-month to use less effective and more toxic cancer drugs – Oct 2014
- More vegetables or fish, less Cancer – June 2014
- Dog Cancer (hemangiosarcoma) is rare if more than 100 ng of vitamin D – July 2014
- Role of Vitamin D in human Diseases and Disorders – An Overview – DBP, VDR June 2014
- Cancer incidence not reduced by 1100 IU of vitamin D (proven again) but mortality decreased – June 2014
- Less intestinal cancer in mice if add vitamin D, but even less with ultraviolet light – June 2014
- Cancer Council of Australia recommends 30 minutes of daily sunshine – June 2014
- Cancer survival 4 percent more likely with just a little more vitamin D (4 ng) - meta-analysis July 2014
- Vitamin D Receptor role in Autoimmune Diseases and or cancers – Nov 2013
- Vitamin D receptor polymorphisms are risk factors for various cancers – meta-analysis Jan 2014
- Vitamin D and Cancer at NIH - Oct 2013
- Vitamin D proven to treat or prevent many cancers in animals, but only breast cancer in humans so far – Jan 2014
- Cancer and low vitamin D – which causes which – Nov 2013
- Cancer incidence in 87 countries is related to food, smoking, alcohol, GDP, and UVB - Jan 2014
- Skin cancer increases other cancers (low-vitamin D) – Dec 2013
- Cancer Survival is poor if vitamin D is less than 20ng (every study showed benefit)– review Nov 2013
- People more likely to freckle are more likely to get prostate cancer (low vitamin D) – April 2013
- National Cancer Institute noticing Vitamin D - Oct 2013
- Appears that IBD lowers vitamin D, which increases risk of cancer by 80 percent – Oct 2013
- 4 uses of tanning beds per year did not reduce rate of internal cancers – Oct 2013
- Vitamin d - pivotal nutraceutical in the regulation of cancer metastasis and angiogenesis. – 2013
- Molecular Link between Vitamin D and Cancer Prevention – Oct 2013
- Review of cancer and supplements includes vitamin D – Sept 2013
- Death of women from cancer 24% less likely if 20 ng more vitamin D – meta-analysis Sept 2013
- Probably need more than 1000 IU of vitamin D to prevent cancer – meta-analysis Aug 2013
- Mayo clinic starting Cancer RCT using grossly inadequate 2,000 IU of vitamin D – Sept 2013
- Children with Cancer were 3X more likely to be vitamin D deficient – July 2013
- Vitamin D protects against many types of health problems – review May 2013
- Less Solar Radiation was associated with more Cancer - 1941
- Some childhood cancer 30% less likely in parts of California with more UVB – April 2013
- Cancer associations, including problems with too much vitamin D – March 2013
- Low vitamin D strongly related to death due to tobacco cancer, but not others – March 2013
- Vitamin D increasingly associated with inflammation such as RA, TB, Lupus, and cancer – March 2013
- The sun appears better at reducing incidence of some cancers than vitamin D – Dec 2012
- Solar UVB reduces Cancer Risk – Grant, Jan 2013
- The Anti-cancer Actions of Vitamin D – Jan 2013
- Vitamin D Supplementation and Cancer - Review of RCT Jan 2013
- Vitamin D and Cancer Mortality – review Jan 2013
- Vitamin D, Sunlight and Cancer Connection – Holick Jan 2013
- Relevance of Vitamin D in Bone and Muscle Health of Cancer Patients - Jan 2013
- How Vitamin D prevents many cancers (c-MYC) – Nov 2012
- Cancer
- Big Pharma continues to seek a patentable form of vitamin D for Breast Cancer – Nov 2012
- A review of the evidence regarding the solar ultraviolet-B-vitamin D-cancer hypothesis - Oct 2012
- Vitamin D still appears to reduce Cancer Mortality – Systematic Review Oct 2012
- CYP24A1 gene in cancer cells may actually remove vitamin D from the blood – Oct 2012
- Vitamin D levels very low for some childhood cancers, then got lower – Sept 2012
- More US deaths due to cancer than heart if dark skinned – Sept 2012
- Vitamin D and cancer: a view based of all models – April 2012
- Review of Cancer and Vitamin D – April 2012
- Photodynamic therapy for Cancer might be helped by vitamin D – July 2012
- Vitamin D in Cancer Patients: Above All, Do No Harm – 2009
- Not enough women willing to stop taking vitamin D to permit breast cancer clinical trial – June 2012
- More UVB is associated with less cancer – study of 450,000 people – April 2012
- Hypothesis: Blacks get more cancer than whites due to lower levels of vitamin D – June 2012
- 2000 IU of vitamin D reduced fatigue of advanced cancer – RCT May 2012
- The role of vitamins in cancer: a review – 2011
- Vitamin D3 analog, 20-hydroxyvitamin D, inhibits cancer cells and is non-toxic – March 2012
- Advanced stage cancer 3X more likely if low level of vitamin D – March 2012
- Getting little UV is associated with 15 types of Cancer – Jan 2012
- Lack of solar UVB in US is associated with some Cancers - 2006
- Possible ways that vitamin D does its magic
- 800 IU Vitamin D doesn't prevent heart attack or cancer – Dec 2011
- The lower the vitamin D the sooner a blood cancer needed to be treated – Nov 2011
- Use of tanning beds would reduce associated deaths by 10X – Oct 2011
- Cancer in children 6X more likely if very low vitamin D – Oct 2011
- Breast and other Cancer prevention - Dr. Wascher 2011
- Vitamin D has a complex relationship with Cancer – meta-analysis July 2011
- Cancers and Vitamin D Council
- Sun exposure is associated with increased survival from melanoma – 2005
- Excessive sun increases cancer all around the body – July 2011
- Some cancer due to low UV – Grant – April 2010
- Hypothesis – anticancer benefits from synergy of omega-3 and vitamin D – May 2011
- Vitamin D and Cancer Treatment and Prevention – presentations May 2011
- Mortality and Cancer varies with latitude in France too – 2010
- Video on how Vitamin D reduces Cancer – Feb 2011
- Vitamin D and Prevention of Cancer — Is it ready for Prime Time – March 2011
- Vitamin D appears to both prevent and treat various cancers – Mar 2011
- Children with Cancer were 6X more likely to have less than 10ng of vitamin D – Feb 2011
- Large Healthcare Org: 1500-2000 IU vitamin D to reduce cancer - Dec 2009
- Increase in some childhood cancers with latitude – Nov 2010
- How active vitamin D stops various cancers – abstract Oct 2010
- Is there an optimal level of vitamin D to prevent cancer – Sept 2010
- Less cancer if had more physical activity – perhaps due to the sun – Sept 2010
- Overview Cancer and vitamin D
- Active form of vitamin D appears to help prevent and treat some cancers – Feb 2011
- How I Treat Vitamin D Deficiency - for Cancer Mar 2010
- Anticancer Vitamins du Jour—The ABCED's So Far – July 2010
- Dr Frank Garland who researched vitamin D and cancer died - Aug 2010
- Cancer meeting discussion of Nov 2009 mentioned vitamin D
- Impediments to UV Vitamin D Cancer hypothesis – Sept 2009
- 18 Quotes on Vitamin D and Cancer – Feb 2010
- Meta-analysis of 3 cancers - 10 ng more vitamin D decrease colorectal by 15 percent– May 2010
- Vitamin D and Cancer from Health Book Summaries – Feb 2010
- 30 to 40 ng of vitamin D did not reduce some Cancers - no surprise - June 2010
- China has documented that less UV results in more cancer – June 2010
- Why clinical trials are not finding benefits of vitamin D on cancer prevention and treatment – June 2010
- Lack of vitamin D may account for increased rate of some cancers in obese persons – May 2010
- Grassroots PDF and video updates May and June 2010
- Hypercalcemia overview
- Vitamin D Shows Potential in Natural Chemotherapy April 2010
- Solar radiation, vitamin D and cancer incidence and mortality in Norway
- Vitamin D decreases incidence of disease
- file:
- Vitamin D and Calcium reduces risk of cancer - Lappe 2007
- Vitamin D and Cancer - Dalgleish May 2011.pdf
- Vitamin D and Cancer - GrassRoots May 2011.pdf
- Vitamin D and Calcium reduce Cancer - RCT trial - Lappe - May 2011.pdf
- Vitamin D and UVB reduce Cancer - Grant May 2011.pdf
- Cancer cells and vitamin D - Kallay May 2011.jpg
- Cancer cells and Calcium - Kallay May 2011.jpg
- U shaped risk curves happen where UV varies a lot - Vieth 2011.jpg
- Vitamin D Cancer - Garland 2009.pdf
- 8000 IU raised vitamin D for many Cancer patients - 2010.pdf
- vitamin D and cancer condundrum - 2010.pdf
- Mechanisms of the Anti-Cancer and Anti-Inflammatory - 2011.PDF
- Vitamin D in combination cancer treatment - 2010.PDF
- Letter to editor on errors in rare cancers study - Sept 2010
- Cancer incidence with vitamin D supplements- CDC Aug 2010 - GIF
- Vitamin D for prevention and treatment of Cancer - technical July 2010
- Vitamin D prevent 25% cancers - 2009
- Promise of vitamin D analogues in the treatment of Cancer -2006
- meta analysis vitamin D and cancers - prepub 2010
- Role of vitamin D in cancer treatment and prevention - June 2010
- Many cancers increase in Japan during past 50 years
- Chart All Cancers reduced by 68 percent if > 29ng/ml Heaney - May 2010
- Vitamin D Cancer and latitude 2008 PNAS
- Vitamin D prevent Cancer - 2009
- file gallery:
More Cancers if poor Vitamin D Receptor
Cancers get less Vitamin D when there is a poor Vitamin D Receptor- Vitamin D Receptor pages in VitaminDWiki with CANCER in title 86 as of July 2023
- Cancer and the Vitamin D Receptor, a primer – Sept 2017
- Vitamin D Receptor (Cancers OR Viruses) - many studies
- Risk of Cancer increased if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis of 73 studies Jan 2016
- Cancer (general) and VDR
23 articles - Breast Cancer and VDR
24 articles - Colon Cancer and VDR
13 articles - Prostate Cancer and VDR
7 articles - Skin Cancer and VDR
10 articles - Note some Health problems, such as some Cancers, protect themselves
by actively reducing Receptor activation
(OMNS Feb 6 2019) The UVB-vitamin D-cancer hypothesis is nearly 40 years old [Garland, 1980]. There are 5293 publications with cancer and vitamin D or 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] in the title or abstract listed at pubmed.gov as of January 30, 2019. Nonetheless, this hypothesis has not been widely accepted; in fact, since the publication of the results for vitamin D supplementation for cancer in the VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL (VITAL) [Manson, 2019], support has been eroded further. As will be discussed here, the problem does not seem to be lack of evidence but, instead, the difference in how two cultures, the 'scientific' and the 'medical' communities, evaluate evidence.Ecological studies
Scientific evidence can take many forms. For vitamin D and cancer, there are several main types of evidence. The type first used to develop the hypothesis and extend it was the geographical ecological approach. In this approach, populations are defined by geographical location and cancer outcomes averaged for each population are compared statistically with averaged indices for solar UVB dose as well as other cancer risk-modifying factors. This approach has identified about 20 types of cancer for which solar UVB doses are inversely correlated with mortality rates, primarily in countries near the equator [Moukayed, Grant, 2013]. But since this approach cannot prove causality, critics question whether other factors might explain the findings.
Observational studies
Another approach is called "observational." Generally, participants are enrolled in cohorts with blood drawn at baseline and cancer incidences noted prospectively during a several-year follow-up period. Such studies have found very strong inverse correlations between baseline serum 25(OH)D concentration and incidence of colorectal cancer [Garland, Gorham, 2017]. However, for breast cancer, such prospective studies have not found similar results. As explained in 2015, the problem with studying breast cancer incidence in this way is that it develops very rapidly, so that baseline 25(OH)D after a long follow-up period may not be as relevant [Grant, 2015]. However, case-control studies, in which 25(OH)D is measured near the time of cancer diagnosis, find very strong inverse correlations between 25(OH)D and breast cancer incidence [Grant, 2015], [Grant and Boucher, 2017]. Critics of this approach question whether having cancer affects 25(OH)D, i.e. "reverse causation." There is no evidence that it does in studies made near the time of diagnosis, but it could as cancer progresses. However, concern over "reverse causation" has been raised to explain why some vitamin D randomized controlled trials (RCTs) do not agree with most observational studies [Autier, 2017].
Studies of biological mechanisms
A third approach is to study mechanisms whereby vitamin D reduces risk of cancer. The mechanisms can be grouped into those that reduce incidence, angiogenesis, and metastasis — and are well known [Moukayed, Grant, 2013], [Moukayed, Grant, 2017].
Genetic studies
A fourth approach is to use Mendelian randomization (MR) studies on gene variants that regulate serum 25(OH)D concentrations [Zheng et al. 2017]. This approach is thought to be independent of UVB exposure and oral vitamin D intake, and so should be able to assess causality. Unfortunately, the mutations studied so far only affect 25(OH)D by small amounts, so that to be definitive, this approach would require a large cohort of participants, perhaps 100,000. While there have been many MR studies of vitamin D and cancer, only one, for ovarian cancer [Ong, 2016], found a beneficial effect of serum 25(OH)D elevated by gene variants, and a subsequent study by the same author did not [Ong, 2018].
Randomized Controlled Trials
This brings us to the fifth approach, one favored by the medical profession: the randomized controlled trial (RCT). The two basic assumptions of RCTs for pharmaceutical drugs are that the trial is the only source of the agent and that there is a linear dose-response relationship. Neither assumption is satisfied for vitamin D; an increment in the dose of vitamin D induces a smaller change in serum 25(OH)D with higher baseline 25(OH)D levels, so that at higher baseline 25(OH)D levels the same dose produces smaller reduction in cancer risk. Robert Heaney pointed out in 2014 that the proper way to conduct RCTs for nutrients such as vitamin D required assessment of vitamin D status [Heaney, 2014], an approach that was further developed in 2018 [Grant et al., 2018]. With this background, we can review the vitamin D-cancer RCTs reported to date.
The first reported vitamin D-cancer RCT showing benefits of supplementation was from Creighton University [Lappe, 2007]. This study involved postmenopausal women living in Nebraska who were on average slightly overweight (body mass index 29), with a baseline 25(OH)D of 29 ng/mL. Those in one treatment group were given 1000 IU/d vitamin D3 plus 1450 mg/d calcium, those in a second treatment group were given 1450 mg/d calcium and placebo, while those in the control group were given only the placebos. This study found that the reduction of incident cancer in the Ca + D group was 60% and in Ca-only group was 47%. But when analysis was performed for cancers diagnosed after the first 12 months, the reduction for the Ca + D group jumped to 77% while it did not change significantly for the Ca-only group. In this study, both vitamin D treatment and basal 25(OH)D were found to be significant and independent predictors of cancer risk. [Lappe, 2007].
The second report of a successful vitamin D RCT was a reanalysis of data from the Women's Health Initiative. This study found, in a group of more than15,000 women, that for those (43%) who were not taking personal calcium or vitamin D supplements at the beginning of the trial, CaD supplements given to a random selection of them non-significantly reduced the risk of colorectal cancer by 17%, but significantly decreased the risk of total, breast, and invasive breast cancers by 14-20% . In the women who were taking personal supplements of calcium or vitamin D, the additional supplements did not alter cancer risk. [Bolland, 2011]. These results are consistent with the women not taking vitamin D supplements prior to entry into the study having had low baseline serum 25(OH)D levels.
The third major successful vitamin D RCT was another one from Creighton University, again with people on average slightly overweight (BMI 30) with a baseline 25(OH)D level of 33 ng/mL. Those in the treatment group were given 2000 IU/d vitamin D3 plus 1500 mg/d calcium, while those in the control group were given placebos; this study found that cancer incidence over 4 years was 4.2 percent in the vitamin D3 + calcium group and 6 percent in the placebo group, a non-significant difference. [Lappe, 2017] However, observational data from this RCT, reported in the online supplement, showed that the achieved serum 25(OH)D was significantly inversely associated with cancer incidence, because compared to those with a baseline serum 25(OH)D level < 30 ng/ml, the cancer incidence for those with a 25(OH)D level between 30 and 55 ng/ml was reduced by 35 percent.
The vitamin D-cancer RCT with the most recent results is VITAL [Manson, 2019]. This RCT had more than 25,000 participants including 5106 black participants. Half were given 2000 IU/d vitamin D3 and half were given a placebo. Again, most were slightly overweight (BMI 28). Mean baseline 25(OH)D in the treatment group was 28 ng/ml for males (based on 395 participants) and 32 ng/ml for females (based on 441 participants). Over a 5.3year follow-up the study found cancer in 1617 participants (vitamin D: 793, placebo: 824).The vitamin D group had a 17% lower risk of death from cancer (341 deaths); a slightly higher risk (2%) for breast cancer; a slightly higher risk (9%) for colorectal cancer; and a 12% lower risk for prostate cancer. However, it also reported that, excluding the first two years of follow-up, the risk of death from cancer was reduced by 25%, and that for those who were borderline overweight (BMI < 27), the risk was reduced by 14%, while those who were not overweight had a 26% lower risk of invasive cancer! In subjects with dark skin, the risk was non-significantly lower by 13%. Since a given vitamin D dose will increase serum 25(OH)D more in thin than in fat people, those BMI results were predictable, and since those with dark skin have average serum 25(OH)D levels lower than those with light skin, those differences were also predictable.
While it is understandable that the New England Journal of Medicine has a policy of reporting only one major result for an RCT, what is not understandable is that the non-significant results in the above-mentioned study for cancer were reported but not the significant ones. Unfortunately, the vast majority of news reports only referred to results mentioned in the abstract, often quoting the first author, but without mentioning the beneficial effects of supplementation. A contributing factor to the errant reporting was likely that the VITAL study was designed prior to 2012 [Manson, 2012], when the importance of assessing vitamin D status by measuring 25(OH)D first became widely appreciated. In addition, concern had been raised during the Institute of Medicine's review on vitamin D that there might be a U-shaped 25(OH)D-health outcome relationship [Ross, 2011], based on some observational studies. Thus, instead of using a higher vitamin D3 dose, such as 4000 IU/d, only 2000 IU/d was given. It was subsequently pointed out that the poorer outcomes noted with high 25(OH)D levels were analyzed without ascertaining when those subjects started supplementation [Grant, 2016]. However, if such subjects had only recently started supplementation, either for a common condition such as osteoporosis, or for non-specific symptoms associated with their illness, the resulting delay in the rise of their 25(OH)D level could skew the result.
GrassrootsHealth.net has taken the initiative and is conducting vitamin D supplementation studies based on measurements of 25(OH)D. In their first such study, they pooled results for 1135 women in the GrassrootsHealth volunteer cohort plus 1169 women in the first Creighton University RCT [Lappe, 2017], and found a large and significant reduction in risk (67%) for all-cancer incidence for serum 25(OH)D levels > 40 ng/ml vs. < 20 ng/ml [McDonnell, 2016]. In their second study, based on 3325 women from the two Creighton University cohorts and 1713 women from the GrassrootsHealth cohort, they found reductions in breast cancer incidence that were associated with higher levels of baseline serum 25(OH)D. Women with 25(OH)D concentrations ≥ 60 ng/ml had an 80% lower risk of breast cancer than women with concentrations < 20 ng/ml after adjustment for age, BMI, smoking status, calcium supplement intake, and study of origin. [McDonnell, 2018]
Discussion
In retrospect, the ecological studies were based primarily on cancer mortality rates, for which the evidence of beneficial effects of vitamin D is stronger than for cancer incidence rates. However, combining all the different types of studies does suggest that having a serum 25(OH)D in the range of 40-60 ng/ml significantly reduces the risk of, and increases survival from, many common types of cancer. One exception is prostate cancer, for which a higher serum 25(OH)D appears to predict increased incidence rate, [Gao, 2018] but also increases survival rates [Song, 2018]. It should also be noted that dark skin lowers cancer-specific survival rates compared to light skin, even after adjustment for socioeconomic status, stage at diagnosis, and treatment, which is likely attributable to those with dark skin having lower 25(OH)D levels [Grant, Peiris, 2012].
To maintain 25(OH)D in the range 40-60 ng/ml may require doses of 2000-5000 IU/d of vitamin D3 or more, depending on many factors.
Both scientists and physicians claim to have a scientific approach, considering a broad range of evidence. For example, the use of Hill's criteria for systematizing evidence on causality in a biological system [Hill, 1965] can include strength of association, consistency, temporality, biological gradient, plausibility, coherence, experimental evidence (e.g., RCT), and analogy. These criteria have been examined for vitamin D and cancer with the finding that they are generally satisfied [Grant, 2009]; [|Mohr, 2012]. Physicians, however, are accustomed to judging pharmaceutical agents on RCT findings. However, RCTs of vitamins or other essential nutrients cannot be judged as if they were medical agents, since, as we have seen above, this is usually inappropriate. In addition, medical training rarely provides much information on nutrition. Time for physicians to invest on basic sciences may be limited, so many have little incentive to read more than the abstracts of even quite important papers.
Thus, to those working on nutrition, and in particular those working on the health benefits of vitamin D and on identifying the many mechanisms of action of hormonal vitamin D, the medical system appears to view vitamin D almost as a threat to clinical practice, perhaps even to health care income generation.
Further, the persistent disregard of the known actions of vitamin D3 and its potential health benefits suggests that the well-known methods for discouraging acceptance of change, as identified in the 'Disinformation Playbook' are being used deliberately to discourage the provision of vitamin D for the large numbers of people with deficiency. That would not be tolerated for other basic nutrients such as iron or calcium [Grant, 2018].To bridge the gulf between the scientific and medical communities regarding vitamin D and cancer may need a well-designed vitamin D3 clinical trial, based on measuring baseline and achieved 25(OH)D, and supplementing individuals with various vitamin D3 doses as required to achieve repletion, possibly at up to 5000 IU/d. However, physicians can, and often do, add vitamin D treatment to their management of cancer treatment, and individuals can still take personal supplements of vitamin D3.
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Vitamin D Reduces Cancer Risk - Why Scientists Accept It but Physicians Do Not - Feb 20198556 visitors, last modified 20 Jan, 2024, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category) - Breast Cancer and VDR