Adjunctive vitamin D for treatment of active tuberculosis in India: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
Lancet Infect Dis. 2015 Apr 8. pii: S1473-3099(15)70053-8. doi: 10.1016/S1473-3099(15)70053-8. [Epub ahead of print]
Daley P1, Jagannathan V2, John KR3, Sarojini J2, Latha A2, Vieth R4, Suzana S2, Jeyaseelan L2, Christopher DJ2, Smieja M5, Mathai D6.
BACKGROUND:
Vitamin D has immunomodulatory effects that might aid clearance of mycobacterial infection. We aimed to assess whether vitamin D supplementation would reduce time to sputum culture conversion in patients with active tuberculosis.
METHODS:
We did this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, superiority trial at 13 sites in India. Treatment-naive patients who were sputum-smear positive, HIV negative, and had pulmonary tuberculosis were randomly assigned (1:1), with centrally labelled, serially numbered bottles, to receive standard active tuberculosis treatment with either supplemental high-dose oral vitamin D3 (four doses of 2·5 mg at weeks 0, 2, 4, and 6) or placebo. Neither the patients nor the clinical and laboratory investigators and personnel were aware of treatment assignment. The primary efficacy outcome was time to sputum culture conversion. Analysis was by modified intention to treat. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00366470.
FINDINGS:
Between Jan 20, 2010, and Aug 23, 2011, we randomly assigned 247 participants to the vitamin D group (n=121) or the placebo group (n=126), of whom 211 participants (n=101 and n=110, respectively) were included in the primary efficacy analysis. Median time to culture conversion in the vitamin D group was 43·0 days (95% CI 33·3-52·8) versus 42·0 days (33·9-50·1) in the placebo group (log-rank p=0·95). Three (2%) patients died in the vitamin D group and one (1%) patient died in the placebo group; no death was considered attributable to the study intervention. No patients had hypercalcaemia.
INTERPRETATION:
Our findings show that vitamin D supplementation did not reduce time to sputum culture conversion. Further studies should investigate the role of vitamin D in prevention or reactivation of tuberculosis infection.
FUNDING:
Dalhousie University and Infectious Diseases Training and Research Centre.
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
PMID: 25863562
Notes by VitaminDWiki
- It is doubtful that such a small amount of vitamin D for such a short time could have possibly resulted in achieving vitamin D levels above 40 ng – where it can do some good.
- Lancet wants $31 for the PDF
See also VitaminDWiki
- Children with active TB were 4.6X more likely to have low vitamin D – Dec 2014
- Overview Tuberculosis and Vitamin D
Note: Way back in 1848 Vitamin D treated TB 3X better than the existing treatments - TB conversion 6 percent less likely with just 1 ng more vitamin D – Oct 2014
- Less likely to catch Tuberculosis if have OK level of vitamin D – Nov 2014
- Probability of getting TB reduced 60 percent with just 800 IU of vitamin D – RCT Aug 2012
- All items in TB and vitamin D
125 items Tuberculosis not treated by 7,000 IU Vitamin D daily average for 6 weeks – RCT April 20155363 visitors, last modified 13 Apr, 2015, This page is in the following categories (# of items in each category)