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Ulcerative Colitis and Vitamin D - many studies


12+ Vitamin D pages with "Ulcerative Colitis" or UC in the title

Items found: 12

Ulcerative Colitis is 1.9 X more likely if low Vitamin D – meta-analysis Oct 2023

The correlation between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D level and ulcerative colitis: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Eur J Gastroenterol Hepatol . 2023 Oct 18. doi: 10.1097/MEG.0000000000002670 PDF is behind a $47 paywall
Chenyu Liu 1, Xin Liu, Haitao Shi, Fenrong Chen, Linlang Sun, Xin Gao, Yan Wang

Objective: The incidence of UC has increased yearly. Many studies have suggested that patients with ulcerative colitis have abnormal vitamin D levels. A systematic review and meta-analysis were conducted to investigate the association between vitamin D levels and ulcerative colitis.

Methods: We searched PubMed, Embase, Cochrane Library, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang and China Science and Technology Journal Database (VIP) from inception to December 2022. We included case-control studies comparing the differences in vitamin D levels between patients with ulcerative colitis and healthy populations. Meta-analysis was performed using Review Manager5.4, Stata17.0 and other software.

Results: Sixteen eligible observational studies were selected from 473 articles involving 2234 subjects, and they included 987 patients with ulcerative colitis and 1247 controls. The results showed that the serum level of vitamin D in patients with ulcerative colitis was significantly lower than that in healthy controls (SMD = -0.83, 95% CI: -1.18, -0.48). Vitamin D deficiency was reported in five studies. The prevalence of vitamin D deficiency was significantly higher in the ulcerative colitis group than in the healthy control group (OR = 1.90, 95% CI: 1.38, 2.62).

Conclusion: Serum vitamin D levels were significantly lower in patients with ulcerative colitis than in healthy controls.

References
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  • Tangestani H, Boroujeni HK, Djafarian K, Emamat H, Shab-Bidar S. Vitamin D and the gut microbiota: a narrative literature review. Clin Nutr Res 2021; 10:181–191.
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  • Jin C. The level of serum vitamin D and interleukin 17 in Patients with ulcerative colitis. Dalian Medical University, 2017.
  • Jiajia W, Qiaomin W, Zhengxiang WU, Qiuxia J, Xiuli Z, Ting LI. Impact of serum 25OHD level on disease activity and quality of life in patients with ulcerative colitis. Gastroenterology 2017; 22:25–29.
  • Yan L, Ran Z, Lian-jie L, Yu J, Yong C, Chang-qing Z. Association of serum 25 (OH) vitamin D levels with ulcerative colitis activity. Prog anat sci 2014; 20:142–144 + 150.
  • Bo Z, Jihua P, Jianzhang W, Shuguang C. An analysis of vitamin D receptor FokI gene polymorphism and vitamin D levels in patients with ulcerative colitis. Chin J Exp Sur 2016; 33:221–224.
  • Wang HQ, Zhang WH, Wang YQ, Geng X-P, Wang M-W, Fan Y-Y, et al. Colonic vitamin D receptor expression is inversely associated with disease activity and jumonji domain-containing 3 in active ulcerative colitis. World J Gastroenterol 2020; 26:7352–7366.
  • Zheng SZ, Zhang DG, Wu H, Jiang L-J, Jin J, Lin X-Q, et al. The association between vitamin D receptor polymorphisms and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels with ulcerative colitis in Chinese Han population. Clin Res Hepatol Gastroenterol 2017; 41:110–117.
  • Krela-Kazmierczak I, Szymczak-Tomczak A, Tomczak M, Lykowska-Szuber L, Eder P, Kucharski MA, et al. Is there a relation between vitamin D, interleukin-17, and bone mineral density in patients with inflammatory bowel disease? Arch Med Sci 2018; 17:662–674.
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  • Law AD, Dutta U, Kochhar R, Vaishnavi C, Kumar S, Noor T, et al. Vitamin D deficiency in adult patients with ulcerative colitis: Prevalence and relationship with disease severity, extent, and duration. Indian J Gastroenterol 2019; 38:6–14.
  • Dash KR, Panda C, Das HS, Mishra D, Behera SK, Parida PK, et al. Association of vitamin D level with disease severity and quality of life in newly diagnosed patients of ulcerative colitis: a cross-sectional analysis. Cureus 2021; 13:e16481.
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  • Ahamed ZR, Dutta U, Sharma V, et al. Oral nano vitamin D supplementation reduces disease activity in ulcerative colitis: a double-blind randomized parallel group placebo-controlled trial. J Clin Gastroenterol 2019; 53:e409–e415.
  • Garg M, Hendy P, Ding JN, Shaw S, Hold G, Hart A. The effect of vitamin D on intestinal inflammation and faecal microbiota in patients with ulcerative colitis. J Crohns Colitis 2018; 12:963–972.
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  • Sharifi A, Vahedi H, Nedjat S, Mohamadkhani A, Hosseinzadeh Attar MJ. Vitamin D decreases Beck depression inventory score in patients with mild to moderate ulcerative colitis: a double-blind randomized placebo-controlled trial. J Diet Suppl 2019; 16:541–549.
  • Karimi S, Tabataba-Vakili S, Yari Z, Alborzi F, Hedayati M, Ebrahimi-Daryani N, et al. The effects of two vitamin D regimens on ulcerative colitis activity index, quality of life and oxidant/anti-oxidant status. Nutr J 2019; 18:16..

UC reduced by Selenium - RCT July 2023

The effect of selenium supplementation on disease activity and immune-inflammatory biomarkers in patients with mild-to-moderate ulcerative colitis: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial
European Journal of Nutrition (2023)
Maryam Khazdouz, Naser Ebrahimi Daryani, Makan Cheraghpour, Foroogh Alborzi, Motahareh Hasani, Shaghayegh Baradaran Ghavami & Farzad Shidfar

Purpose
Selenium (Se) supplementation may help reduce inflammation and disease activity in ulcerative colitis (UC) patients. We investigated the therapeutic effects of Se administration in cases with mild-to-moderate active UC.

Methods
A multicenter, double-blind, randomized clinical trial (RCT) was conducted on 100 cases with active mild-to-moderate UC. The patients were randomly allocated to be given an oral selenomethionine capsule (200 mcg/day, n = 50) or a placebo capsule (n = 50) for 10 weeks. The primary outcome was defined as disease activity via the Simple Clinical Colitis Activity Index (SCCAI), and secondary outcomes were measured at the end of the study.

Results
After 10 weeks, the SCCAI score's mean was reduced in the Se group (P < 0.001). At the end of the intervention, clinical improvement (decline of 3 ≥ score from baseline score) was observed in 19 patients (38%) of the Se group and 3 patients (6%) of the placebo group. The patients with clinical remission (defined as SCCAI ≤ 2) were assigned in the Se group (P = 0.014). The Se group’s quality of life and Se serum levels were enhanced at the end of the study (P < 0/001). In the Se group, the mean concentration of interleukin-17 decreased (P < 0/001). However, the levels of interleukin-10 showed no considerable change between the two groups in the 10th week (P = 0.23).

Conclusion
Se supplementation as add-on therapy with medical management induced remission and improved the quality of life in patients with active mild-to-moderate UC.
 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki

This study was reviewed by Examine.com


Selenium is important to health - many studies 16+ studies

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