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Is low Vitamin D just a marker of disease - March 2023


Low vitamin D is a marker for poor health and increased risk for disease: But causality is still unclear in most cases – Oct 2022

Journal of Internal Medicine https://doi.org/10.1111/joim.13582C
Peter Bergman Editorial

It is almost 100 years since Adolf Windaus received the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1928 for his studies’ on the constitution of sterols and their connection with vitamins’, including vitamin D and its role to prevent rickets [1]. The role of vitamin D to protect the bone has been well known since and has a central role in all medical textbooks. This part of vitamin D metabolism is generally known as the endocrine system, where the liver produces the storage form 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25OHD) and the kidney carries out the conversion into bioactive 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25OHD), which mainly regulates calcium balance. In addition, the proform 25OHD can be activated locally in many different cell types, including monocytes, epithelial cells and even in neurons [2, 3]. Local production of the active form of vitamin D (1,25OHD) leads to activation of the vitamin D receptor and subsequent transcription of several hundreds of genes, depending on the cell type and physiological context [4]. This part of vitamin D metabolism is called the paracrine system and has been the focus of intense research during recent years [5]. In parallel with the molecular discoveries of vitamin D metabolism, there has been a rapid increase in observational studies that have found associations between low vitamin D levels and increased risk of many common diseases, including cancer, cardiovascular diseases, respiratory tract infections and Alzheimer's disease as well as all-cause mortality [6-9]. Combined, there has been a solid rationale to perform randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in many of these areas since there is a potential mechanism for beneficial effects and data from observational studies show an increased risk for disease with lower vitamin D levels in plasma. Randomised and placebo-controlled clinical trials of vitamin D supplementation in cancer, cardiovascular diseases and respiratory tract infections have shown both beneficial effects as well as null results [10, 11]. Interestingly, meta-analyses, where results from many RCTs are combined, have shown beneficial effects of vitamin D supplementation on cancer mortality and total mortality as well as reduced risk for respiratory tract infections [12-14]. In addition, Mendelian randomisation studies have shown an inverse association between genetically predicted 25OHD levels and all-cause mortality [15].

It is against this background that Sha et al. set out to obtain further information on the role of vitamin D in reduction of mortality from cancer and other causes, including cardiovascular and respiratory diseases [16]. They used data from the UK Biobank (n = 445,601 participants), including data on the use of vitamin D supplements (over-the-counter drugs or as part of a multivitamin product) and 25OHD levels defined as deficiency (<30 nmol/L) or insufficiency (30 to <50 nmol/L). The outcomes were all-cause and cause-specific mortality, with a focus on mortality due to cardiovascular disease, cancer and respiratory disease. Several covariates were also collected for the adjustment analyses, including demographic and socio-economic factors, which potentially could influence the outcome. The mean age of the cohort was 56.5 years, and a majority were overweight or obese. Interestingly, 21% of the cohort had vitamin D deficiency (<30 nmol/L) and 34.3% had insufficiency (<50 nmol/L). Only 4.3% reported a regular intake of vitamin D supplements, whereas 20.4% reported using multivitamin supplements on a regular basis. Consequently, users of vitamin D or multivitamin supplements had a higher level of 25OHD than nonusers.

Next, the authors analysed determinants associated with vitamin D deficiency. In general, worse health concomitant diseases, obesity, higher blood pressure, poor general health and the latitude of the test centre were factors associated with vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency, whereas the use of vitamin D or multivitamin supplements often had the reverse association, that is, healthier people had a higher tendency to take supplements.

The authors found that both vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency were associated with all-cause mortality and mortality due to cancer, cardiovascular disease (CVD) and respiratory diseases. Five different adjustment models were employed, and the hazard ratios were attenuated with increasing adjustment. The excess mortality was most prominent for CVD, followed by respiratory disease mortality and cancer mortality.

Finally, the association between self-reported vitamin D intake and the outcomes was analysed. Notably, no effect was observed, but after considering concomitant diseases and general health status in the broadest adjustment model, users of vitamin D supplements had 10% lower all-cause mortality and 11% lower cancer mortality, whereas mortality for CVD did not reach statistical significance. The strongest effect was found for respiratory diseases, where self-reported vitamin D intake was associated with 29% decreased mortality.

How should these results be interpreted in the light of available evidence? First, there have been many studies before this one with a similar message, that is, low vitamin D levels are associated with many different diseases, including those discussed here. For example, there is evidence from a large European consortium that low vitamin D levels are associated with increased mortality [17]. We also know that vitamin D has several important functions in the body, apart from regulating calcium homeostasis. A recent example is from the covid area, where vitamin D was found to suppress inflammation in T cells, with potential implications for prevention and treatment of SARS CoV-2 infection [18]. However, despite ample evidence from experimental and observational studies, solid data from RCTs showing beneficial effects against any indication are scarce, with a few exceptions. For example, vitamin D did not prevent CVD or cancer in a large and well-designed RCT [19]. In contrast, in the field of respiratory tract infections, the team around Adrian Martineau has performed two large meta-analyses, one of which is an individual patient data meta-analysis, which found small but statistically significant effects of vitamin D supplementation against respiratory tract infections (RTIs) [13, 14]. However, two recent RCTs could not find any evidence of vitamin D supplementation (or cod liver oil supplementation) against covid-19 [20-22]. Thus, there is still a discrepancy between experimental and observational data on one side and data from RCTs on the other. Why is that? There are three models to consider at this point. The first of these implies that low levels of 25OHD are directly causing the disease. Supplementation would then be the solution and lead to reduced risk of the disease. The other explanation could be a reverse association, that is, that the disease causes low vitamin D levels; for example, if a chronic disease leads to immobilisation indoors without exposure to the sun. The final model is that there is a spurious or ‘false’ association where a third factor leads to both low vitamin D levels and increased risk for the disease. In the paper by Sha et al., for example, subjects with self-reported poor health status had 77% higher odds to have vitamin D deficiency and 19% lower odds of taking vitamin D supplements. Thus, there is a significant risk of the healthy user effect, that is, that healthier people tend to take more supplements, spend more time outdoors and simply avoid diseases to a higher extent than poor, fragile and sick people do. Sha et al. apply an ambitious adjustment approach to avoid this risk, but as the authors point out themselves, it is impossible to adjust for so-called hidden or residual confounders. This means that there could still be additional factors that we cannot adjust for, which could influence the observed associations. Thus, despite the impressive size of the study by Sha et al., we still cannot draw firm conclusions on causality and whether vitamin D supplementation can reduce mortality from CVD, cancer or respiratory diseases.

But which advice should we give to the public, physicians and policy makers about vitamin D deficiency and risk for disease? A pragmatic approach could be to focus on groups at the highest risk for vitamin D deficiency and supplement those <50 nmol/L with 1000–2000 IU/day. This would support the bone, improve immunity and potentially also reduce the risk of respiratory tract infections. Perhaps this strategy could also reduce mortality from CVD, cancer and respiratory disease, as suggested by Sha et al., but solid evidence from bona fide randomised and placebo-controlled clinical trials is still warranted.
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Regarding: Feb 2023

Journal of Internal Medicine https://doi.org/10.1111/joim.13621
William B. Grant, Barbara J. Boucher First published: 22 February 2023
To the Editor,

In a recent editorial, Peter Bergman stated that whether associations between low 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations and poor health are causally linked was unclear in most cases [1]. His statement was based on the consideration of vitamin D randomized controlled trials (RCTs). However, as discussed at length in a recent review, most vitamin D RCTs have been poorly designed, conducted, and analyzed [2], having been based on guidelines for pharmaceutical drugs rather than on nutrients. Heaney outlined guidelines for trials of nutrients such as vitamin D in 2014 [3]. These guidelines include, for vitamin D, that serum 25(OH)D concentrations of the proposed participants must be measured, and only subjects with low values should be included, that vitamin D doses used must raise 25(OH)D concentrations to values associated with reduced risk in observational studies, and that, therefore, achieved concentrations must be measured. However, most vitamin D RCTs have included many participants with relatively high 25(OH)D concentrations, have used too low vitamin D doses, and did not base their analyses on individual participant 25(OH)D concentrations.

Also overlooked in the editorial is that Mendelian randomization (MR) studies have now demonstrated the causality of vitamin D in reducing risk of several types of disease. In MR studies, data for alleles of genes involved in the vitamin D pathway are used to estimate genetic variations in serum 25(OH)D (genome-wide association studies) using perhaps 100,000 participants and have then examined health outcomes with those gene variants in large study populations. The assumption is that, because individuals are randomized into study groups by the genetic variants they carry, bias due to confounding and reverse causation is avoided [4]. The Hyppönen group, using MR analyses of findings stratified by baseline 25(OH)D concentration (i.e., non-linear analyses), has shown many significant effects of vitamin D in participants with low 25(OH)D concentrations. This methodology has already demonstrated causality for several health outcomes in their hands, including cardiovascular disease, dementia, and all-cause mortality rates, using data from the UK Biobank [4] as well as for hypertension, multiple sclerosis, and type 2 diabetes mellitus by others that they cite [4].

RCTs and MR studies have not supported the causality of vitamin D in the reducing risk of cancers. However, the evidence from observational studies and geographical ecological studies, as well as an understanding of the mechanisms involved, provides sufficient evidence for causality when considered by Hill's criteria for causality in a biological system [5, 6]. It should also be noted that the Vitamin D and Omega-3 Trial (VITAL) [7] had serious shortcomings including that the mean 25(OH)D concentration for those in the vitamin D treatment arm with 25(OH)D data was 30 ng/mL, that the vitamin D dose was 2000 IU/d but that all participants were permitted to take up to 600–800 IU/d vitamin D and to receive solar UVB, and that outcomes were not analyzed in terms of achieved 25(OH)D concentrations. Nevertheless, secondary analyses did find significant reductions for cancer incidence for those with a BMI <25 kg/m2 and overall reductions in the cancer mortality rate whe n the earliest years of data were omitted.
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Authors reply: March 2023

Journal of Internal Medicine https://doi.org/10.1111/joim.13622
Peter Bergman
Dear Editor,

I have read the letter by Dr Grant with great interest [1]. The question whether vitamin D can prevent common diseases, such as hypertension, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases is often debated. The field is somewhat polarised between hard-line sceptics and more positive “believers”. Both teams use a long line of evidence to support their respective views. In my editorial, I tried to shed light on some of the different views in the field and pointed out that there is still a lack of solid results from large, randomised and placebo-controlled clinical trials (RCTs) for most indications. One exception could be the effects on respiratory tract infections, where two large meta-analyses on RCTs have shown a small but statistically significant effects of about 8%–10% [2, 3]. However, two recent RCTs on vitamin D supplementation against COVID-19 failed to show any beneficial effect [4, 5]. These are just a few examples, but it is clear that we lack evidence from bona fide RCTs on the beneficial effects of vitamin D supplementation for most indications.
However, I do agree with Dr Grant that there are many other pieces of evidence that point in favour of vitamin D for many human diseases. For example, there is mechanistic evidence that vitamin D can modulate inflammation in T-cells from patients infected with SARS CoV-2 [6], vitamin D can directly induce antimicrobial peptides in human macrophages and fight tuberculosis [7] and – as an example, the vitamin D receptor is expressed in beta cells in the pancreas [8]. On top of these mechanistic leads, there are many observational studies that show that low vitamin D levels are associated with an increased risk for disease. And, more recently, several studies based on Mendelian randomisation analysis suggest that vitamin D levels can be linked to human disease. Up to this point, I agree with Dr Grant.

Nevertheless, the bar for certainty is higher than a plausible mechanism, observational evidence and Mendelian randomisation analyses and needs to be based on solid RCTs. It is always possible to find problems with available RCTs in the field and claim that they were not performed in the correct way. However, to be able to change paradigms and guidelines, we need solid evidence from RCTs and that is currently lacking for most indications, as I pointed out in my editorial. For medical doctors, including myself, it is important to follow guidelines and regulations. Thus, any clinical decision to start vitamin D supplementation has to be based on solid evidence. Dr Grant has a slightly different platform in this discussion, because he represents a company that produce and sell vitamin D supplements to the public. This difference might not be decisive for his standpoints but is nevertheless important to keep in mind as there could be a conflict of interest here.

To end in a more positive note, there is still a lot to discover in the field of vitamin D and the optimal RCT, which consider all possible confounders, has not yet been performed. Thus, there is more to learn and perhaps we will reach a more solid evidence base in this field in the future. Until then, I recommend a pragmatic approach where vitamin D supplementation should be directed towards risk-groups for vitamin D deficiency, such as the obese, pregnant women, and those with darker skin. A cut-off level of 50 nmol/L will work for most individuals and supplementation with 1000–2000 IU/day will support the bone, improve immunity, and potentially also reduce the risk for respiratory tract infections.
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Vitamin D is not just association - examples of RCTs finding that adding D fights diseases

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100 most-recently updated RCTs in VitaminDWiki - (from 900+)

This list is automatically updated

Items found: 1011
Title Modified
Stoss (loading) dose of vitamin D resulted in bigger response at 30 days (again) – RCT April 2021 14 Oct, 2021
A small amount of Vitamin D for a short time does not help (2800 IU, 8 weeks) – RCT Oct 2021 12 Oct, 2021
Exercise improves bone strength (good), but not bone mineral density (can be measured) – RCT Oct 2021 08 Oct, 2021
Chronic Heart Failure reduced by 4,000 IU daily for a year – RCT April 2016 07 Oct, 2021
Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) treated by Vitamin D (20,000 IU weekly after loading dose) – RCT June 2016 05 Oct, 2021
Supplement preterm infants with vitamin D if less than 80 ng – RCT Sept 2021 28 Sep, 2021
Benefits of Omega-3 plus Vitamin D were additive – RCT Sept 2021 27 Sep, 2021
COVID-19 appears reduced by Resveratrol plus 100K IU of vitamin D – Small RCT Sept 2021 27 Sep, 2021
TB not prevented by a small amount of Vitamin D (2,000 IU daily average, Mongolia) – RCT July 2020 26 Sep, 2021
Menstrual Pain (PMS) reduced by vitamin D – RCT 2012, 2014, 2016 23 Sep, 2021
COVID-19 defeated 3x faster by 420,000 IU Vitamin D nanoemulsion – RCT Nov 12, 2020 21 Sep, 2021
ADHD 1.5X less likely if 4,400 IU Vitamin D daily during pregnancy - RCT Sept 2021 21 Sep, 2021
Vitamin D not help 10 days after COVID-19 symptoms - RCT March 2021 18 Sep, 2021
Omega-3 paused Alzheimer's decline - RCT Sept 2021 11 Sep, 2021
Infants getting 800 IU more vitamin D daily got no neuro benefit (virtually all Fins were sufficient) – RCT Sept 2021 09 Sep, 2021
Calcifediol (Calcidiol) is far less cost-effective and available than Vitamin D – RCT June 2021 04 Sep, 2021
400 IU of Vitamin D helped breastfed infants, need more – RCT Sept 2021 01 Sep, 2021
NAFLD somewhat treated in children with 2,000 IU Vitamin D daily – RCT Aug 2021 30 Aug, 2021
Vitamin D given for 6 weeks did not slow prediabetes progression 2 years later (no surprise) – RCT Aug 2021 27 Aug, 2021
ICU Vitamin D injection (300,000 IU) helped - RCT Feb 2021 21 Aug, 2021
Diabetes helped somewhat by weekly 50,000 IU of vitamin D (5 ways to improve) – RCT Aug 2021 19 Aug, 2021
Rectal Cancer genes down-regulated by Vitamin D (3,200 IU only helped some) – RCT Aug 2021 03 Aug, 2021
Falls not decreased by 60,000 IU Vitamin D monthly (not a news item) – RCT Aug 2021 02 Aug, 2021
IBS not helped by daily 3,000 IU Vitamin D (but non-daily and gut-friendly help) – RCT July 2021 31 Jul, 2021
COVID-19 outpatients getting Quercetin nanoemulsion had excellent outcomes (Q increased Vitamin D in cells) – RCT – June 2021 30 Jul, 2021
Colorectal Cancer treatment aided by omega-3 plus weekly Vitamin D – RCT Sept 2019 25 Jul, 2021
Vitamin D loading dose was as effective as daily dosing (rickets in this case) – RCT July 2021 19 Jul, 2021
5,000 U daily raised Vitamin D a bit and helped COVID-19 a bit – RCT June 2021 14 Jul, 2021
44 percent of successful RCTs in VitaminDWiki used non-daily dosing - Nov 2020 11 Jul, 2021
Yet another study confirms Depression is treated by weekly Vitamin D (50,000 IU)– RCT Dec 2019 09 Jul, 2021
Diabetic foot ulcers healed 2X faster with 6,400 IU daily - RCT June 2021 08 Jul, 2021
Infant Respiratory Infections not reduced by mothers taking small amount of vitamin D (28,000 weekly)– RCT July 2021 03 Jul, 2021
No Preeclampsia during pregnancy if more than 60 ng of vitamin D – RCT July 2013 02 Jul, 2021
Melanoma not treated by small doses of vitamin D (100,000 IU every 50 days) – RCT June 2021 30 Jun, 2021
Digestive Tract Cancer survival increased 3X if 2,000 IU of vitamin D and have high level of PD-L1 – RCT June 2021 29 Jun, 2021
Fewer pre-infants were vitamin D deficient when they got 800 IU – RCT Feb 2014 29 Jun, 2021
Asthma and COPD in a few seniors greatly decreased by monthly 100,000 IU Vitamin D – RCT Feb 2021 28 Jun, 2021
Single 200,000 IU of vitamin D did not benefit the obese in various ways (not a surprise) – RCT Feb 2021 27 Jun, 2021
Probiotics augments Vitamin D – review of RCT Dec 2020 22 Jun, 2021
Vitamin D supplementation resulted in thicker Brain Cortex – RCT June 2021 12 Jun, 2021
Calcifediol is superior to cholecalciferol (it mainly acts faster) – RCT June 2021 10 Jun, 2021
Pre-term birth rate cut in half with 1000 milligrams of Omega-3 (if initially low) – RCT May 2021 04 Jun, 2021
Need 3X more Vitamin D (or take semi-activated vitamin D) if have poor gut – small RCT May 2021 26 May, 2021
COVID-19 inflammation extinguished by 60,000 IU of vitamin D nanoemulsion daily for a week – RCT May 2021 22 May, 2021
Overweight elderly respond well to 3600 IU Vitamin D daily for a year – RCT May 2021 07 May, 2021
Bone healing not improved by a single bolus dose of 30,000 IU (no surprise) – RCT April 2021 28 Apr, 2021
50,000 IU of Vitamin D once every 2 weeks achieved 40 ng in 3 months – RCT March 2021 24 Apr, 2021
COVID-19 ICU survival rate increased 7X by daily Omega-3 – RCT March 2021 18 Apr, 2021
Recurrence of child pneumonia delayed by 100000 IU of vitamin D – RCT Oct 2010 01 Apr, 2021
Crohn’s disease helped when vitamin D level raised above 30 ng – RCT Feb 2015 26 Mar, 2021
Crohn’s Disease reduced for a year by 7 weeks of high dose Vitamin D – RCT March 2021 26 Mar, 2021
Half the risk of Influenza -A in infants taking 1200 IU of vitamin D for 4 months – RCT Jan 2018 19 Mar, 2021
Ischaemic stroke – Vitamin D doubled survival (Injection followed by monthly 60,000 IU) – RCT Aug 2016 05 Mar, 2021
More Magnesium needed by obese (Mg Sulfate, women in this case) – RCT Dec 2021 03 Mar, 2021
Poor protein binding gene associated with poor Vitamin D response – RCT Nov 2019 02 Mar, 2021
Giving vitamin D stopped bone loss, stopping vitamin D let the bone loss continue – RCT – Feb 2021 28 Feb, 2021
Cardiovascular Disease prevented by Vitamin K2-4 when enough is used – RCT review Sept 2020 27 Feb, 2021
Vitamin D reduced COVID-19 inflammation (60,000 IU daily for 8 days) - RCT Feb 2021 24 Feb, 2021
Prediabetes reduced by weekly 60,000 IU of Vitamin D – RCT Jan 2021 23 Feb, 2021
Zinc supplementation increased Vitamin D levels – RCT Feb 2021 20 Feb, 2021
Bone Mineral Density increased by Resveratrol (which activates the Vitamin D Receptor) – RCT Nov 2020 17 Feb, 2021
Taking Vitamin D just before and after surgery helps (open-heart in this case) – RCT Feb 2021 14 Feb, 2021
5X less likely to enter ICU with COVID-19 if get Calcifediol (semi-activated vitamin D) - RCT Feb 19, 2021 13 Feb, 2021
Vitamin D supplementation and fewer kidney stones – meta-analysis of RCT Sept 2016 11 Feb, 2021
Anti-inflamatory cytokines increased when vitamin D levels were raised above 30 ng – RCT Feb 2015 09 Feb, 2021
Asthma treated by monthly 100,000 IU of Vitamin D if person had very low levels – RCT Feb 2021 06 Feb, 2021
RDA of Vitamins and minerals reduced incarceration by 2,993 dollars per prisoner – RCT Jan 2021 05 Feb, 2021
Response to weekly Calcifediol in 4 months - RCT Aug 2022 03 Feb, 2021
More dental implant bone growth if high vitamin D (natural or supplement) – RCT Feb 2021 02 Feb, 2021
Vitamin D is aided by probiotics (review of RCTs) – Dec 2020 31 Jan, 2021
Endometriosis treated by Vitamin D (50,000 IU bi-weekly) – RCT Jan 2021 30 Jan, 2021
Fewer days in hospital if 300,000 IU of vitamin D before brain surgery - RCT Feb 2021 25 Jan, 2021
Topical vitamin D raised blood level to 38 ng (used Aloe Vera gel) – RCT March 2014 21 Jan, 2021
Smokers helped by Vitamin D (100,000 IU monthly) - RCT Dec 2017 21 Jan, 2021
Weekly response to semi-activated vitamin D slightly better than standard – RCT Nov 2019 21 Jan, 2021
Bone density improved by monthly 50,000 IU of vitamin D for 6 months – RCT Jan 2021 19 Jan, 2021
Migraine headaches reduced with 50,000 IU vitamin D weekly – RCT July 2015 14 Jan, 2021
Vitamin D for infants – 100,000 IU monthly is better than 400 IU daily – RCT Oct 2020 10 Jan, 2021
Dieters lost 5 more pounds if achieved more than 32 ng of vitamin D – RCT March 2014 08 Jan, 2021
Mild cognitive decline reversed by a year of just 800 IU Vitamin D daily – RCT Dec 2020 08 Jan, 2021
Those getting an injection of 300,000 IU Vitamin D got out of the ICU a week sooner – RCT Dec 2020 07 Jan, 2021
Toddlers with more than 48 ng of vitamin D weighted less and were thinner – RCT Dec 2020 22 Dec, 2020
6,400 IU of Vitamin D is safe and effective during breastfeeding – RCT Dec, 2020 16 Dec, 2020
Vitamin D (10,000 IU) changes bacteria in the gut – RCT Jan 2020 13 Dec, 2020
Upper Respiratory Tract Infections in adults reduced by just 400 IU of vitamin D – RCT Dec 2020 12 Dec, 2020
2,000 IU of vitamin D and Omega-3 reduced Cancer death rate bv 40% (normal weight) – VITAL RCT Nov 2020 03 Dec, 2020
Severe COVID-19 not fought by vitamin D when given too late - RCT Nov 18, 2020 22 Nov, 2020
COVID-19 defeated by calcifediol form of Vitamin D in Spain - pilot RCT Aug 29, 2020 22 Nov, 2020
BPH (PSA) decreased by Vitamin D (50,000 IU bi-weekly) – RCT Nov 2020 21 Nov, 2020
500 mg of Magnesium for 8 weeks increased Vitamin D about 30 pcnt – RCT July 2020 24 Oct, 2020
4,000 IU of vitamin D for 1 month does not help (muscles in this case) – RCT Jan 2020 21 Sep, 2020
Diverticular disease:12X reduction if low Vitamin D and given 100,000 IU monthly – RCT Aug 2020 01 Sep, 2020
Swine flu not prevented by 2,000 IU of vitamin D daily (the upper limit at the time) – RCT 2014 30 Aug, 2020
Sperm not improved enough by Vitamin D - 50,000 IU weekly for 8 weeks - RCT Aug 2020 27 Aug, 2020
Vitamin D reduced depression – single 300,000 IU – RCT Aug 2020 22 Aug, 2020
College swimmers helped by daily 5,000 IU of Vitamin D in the fall – RCT Feb 2020 13 Aug, 2020
Vitamin D RDA of 600 IU is not enough - global RCT meta-analysis March 2019 05 Aug, 2020
5 days of 100,000 IU of Vitamin D increased hemoglobin in critical illness – RCT April 2015 25 Jul, 2020
Newborn Vitamin D - single 50,000 IU is better than daily – RCT Sept 2016 25 Jul, 2020
Several Diabetic pains reduced by injection of 300,000 IU of Vitamin D – RCT Feb 2020 25 Jul, 2020

100 most-recently updated Meta-analyses in VitaminDWiki - (from 600+)

This list is automatically updated

Items found: 706
Title Modified
COVID-19 death 1.6 X more likely if low vitamin D (24 studies) – 17th meta-analysis Aug 2021 05 Oct, 2021
Enveloped virus infection (RSV, coronavirus, HIV, etc.) 1.5X more likely if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis Dec 2018 02 Oct, 2021
Dialysis patients 23 percent more likely to live if had just 10 ng more Vitamin D – meta-analysis Feb 2018 29 Sep, 2021
Vitamin D3 better than D2, especially if non-daily or high dose - meta-analysis Sept 2021 23 Sep, 2021
Asthma reduced by Vitamin D, even for those using corticosteroids - meta-analysis 2021 03 Aug, 2021
Stroke 22 percent more likely if low Vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2021 30 Jul, 2021
Most Chinese have less than 20 ng level of Vitamin D - meta-analysis Aug 2021 26 Jul, 2021
Statin pain reduces Vitamin D levels by 4 ng ( 9 studies) - Meta-analysis July 2021 23 Jul, 2021
It appears that 40 percent of African-Caribbeans in the Caribbean have less than 30 ng of Vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2021 19 Jul, 2021
T2 Diabetes 30 percent more likely if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis of 47 studies – July 2021 08 Jul, 2021
Metabolic syndrome risk in children decreased 12 percent for each 10 ng increase in Vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2021 07 Jul, 2021
Colorectal cancer 25 percent less likely if good level of Vitamin D – 20th meta-analysis – June 2021 02 Jul, 2021
Severe COVID-19 3.5 more likely if low vitamin D (30 studies) – meta-analysis July 2021 01 Jul, 2021
Insulin Resistance is associated with low Vitamin D (both diabetic and non-diabetic) – meta-analysis May 2021 30 Jun, 2021
Very low Vitamin D in Indian pregnancies– 1 in 3 women not even have 20 ng – meta-analysis June 2021 30 Jun, 2021
Low back pain – 72 percent have low vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2018 27 Jun, 2021
2X higher risk of Alzheimer’s if poor Vitamin D Receptor – Meta-analysis June 2021 25 Jun, 2021
Psoriasis severity associated with low vitamin D (10 studies) – meta-analysis Jan 2018 22 Jun, 2021
Tuberculosis still associated with low vitamin D – 12th meta-analysis June 2021 12 Jun, 2021
Jaundice associated with 7 ng less vitamin D – Meta-analysis May 2021 30 May, 2021
Diabetic Neuropathy 2.8X higher risk if low vitamin D – meta-analysis May 2021 25 May, 2021
ICU mortality reduced by non-oral vitamin D – meta-analysis May 2021 23 May, 2021
Increased pregnancy problems with COVID-19 – meta-analysis and letter to editor – April 2021 18 May, 2021
Low Vitamin D if little UVB, supplementation helps (Antarctica) – meta-analysis Dec 2021 13 May, 2021
Kidney stone risk varies a lot with both genetics and race – meta-analysis May 2021 07 May, 2021
Stress fractures in basic training associated with 2.5 ng less vitamin D – meta-analysis Nov 2014 05 May, 2021
Hives (Urticaria) 7X more likely if vitamin D deficient, supplementation helps – meta-analysis April 2021 05 May, 2021
Depression treated by 50K IU Vitamin D weekly (but not 1,000 IU daily) – meta-analysis Jan 2021 25 Apr, 2021
Vitiligo associated with low vitamin D (Note: Vit. D and UV has treated it for over a decade) – meta-analysis March 2021 20 Apr, 2021
Prediabetes 1.5 X more likely to go away if take Vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2020 06 Apr, 2021
Vitamin D levels needed and importance - meta-analysis March 2021 04 Apr, 2021
Small vitamin D doses provide small benefits for acute respiratory infections – Meta-analysis March 2021 31 Mar, 2021
COVID-19 mortality 3X more likely if low vitamin D (999,179 people) – meta-analysis March 29, 2021 29 Mar, 2021
COVID-19 was 2.6X more severe if very low Vitamin D (43 studies) – meta-analysis March 26, 2021 27 Mar, 2021
Patients on Hemodialysis 3X more likely if die of heart failure if low Magnesium – meta-analysis Jan 2021 26 Mar, 2021
Influenza Vaccination not benefited by lowish levels of vitamin D – meta-analysis March 2018 25 Mar, 2021
Vitamin C sometimes reduces mechanical ventilation duration – meta-analysis Feb 2020 13 Feb, 2021
Vitamin D supplementation and fewer kidney stones – meta-analysis of RCT Sept 2016 11 Feb, 2021
Adding just a little vitamin D does not help (muscle mass in this case) – meta-analysis Jan 2021 06 Feb, 2021
Less obese child if supplemented with Vitamin D as an infant– meta-analysis Feb 2021 05 Feb, 2021
Vitamin D supplementation fights COVID-19 – 11th meta-analysis Jan 24, 2021 26 Jan, 2021
Respiratory Tract Infection risk reduced 2X by Vitamin D loading doses – meta-analysis Jan 2021 22 Jan, 2021
Migraine headaches treated by Vitamin D – meta-analysis Jan 2021 16 Jan, 2021
Sleep improved by Vitamin D, Melatonin, amino acids, etc. -Meta-analysis Jan 2021 15 Jan, 2021
3.7 X less likely to die of COVID-19 if supplemented with Vitamin D - meta-analysis Jan 5, 2021 06 Jan, 2021
Less likely to test positive for COVID-19 if higher Vitamin D – meta-analysis Jan 6, 2021 06 Jan, 2021
Vitamin D reduces COVID-19 by 80 percent - anonymous meta-analysis - Jan 5, 2021 05 Jan, 2021
Autism associated with low Vitamin D (again) – Meta-Analysis Jan 2021 29 Dec, 2020
Spot Baldness (Alopecia Areata) 4.1 X more likely if low vitamin D – meta-analysis Aug 2020 18 Dec, 2020
Small vitamin D doses given during pregnancy do not reduce childhood asthma – meta-analysis Dec 2020 12 Dec, 2020
T1 Diabetes 3X lower risk if high vitamin D (over 40 ng) – Meta-analysis Nov 2020 30 Nov, 2020
COVID-19 1.7X more likely to be severe if low Vitamin D - meta-analysis Oct 2020 28 Nov, 2020
Increased risk of fracture if high level of Vitamin D (if continue to take Calcium) – umbrella analysis of meta-analyses Nov 2020 26 Nov, 2020
Lung Cancer death 40 percent less likely if high level of Vitamin D – meta-analysis Nov 2020 24 Nov, 2020
Low Vitamin D associated 1.8X increased risk of COVID-19 death in hospital – meta-analysis Nov 4, 2020 22 Nov, 2020
The worse the sleep apnea, the lower the vitamin D levels – meta-analysis 2017, 2020 11 Nov, 2020
Knee osteoarthritis: Vitamin D is the 4th best treatment – meta-analysis Oct 2020 21 Oct, 2020
Breast Cancer again associated with low vitamin D – 15th meta-analysis Sept 2020 02 Oct, 2020
Colorectal cancer treated by Vitamin D – 19th meta-analysis – Sept 2020 17 Sep, 2020
Fewer days in ICU after 300,000 IU of vitamin D, but not 540,000 – meta-analysis Aug 2020 02 Sep, 2020
Live birth 1.7 X more likely after IVF if good level of vitamin D – meta-analysis Aug 2020 15 Aug, 2020
Prudent to consider that Vitamin D has a role in COVID-19 – meta-analysis – Aug 7, 2020 09 Aug, 2020
Vitamin D RDA of 600 IU is not enough - global RCT meta-analysis March 2019 05 Aug, 2020
3X less risk of Liver cancer if more than 30 ng of vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2020 28 Jul, 2020
Recurrent Tonsillitis 4 X more likely if low vitamin D – meta-analysis July 2020 22 Jul, 2020
Endometriosis: 2.7 X more likely if with low vitamin D (trend of 9 studies)– meta-analysis May 2020 21 May, 2020
Dry eyes associated with low Vitamin D – meta-analysis May 2020 19 May, 2020
Small doses of vitamin D do not reduce the risk of Breast Cancer – meta-analysis May 2020 15 May, 2020
Liver Cancer 8 percent less likely for every 4 ng higher level of vitamin D – Meta-analysis April 2020 02 Apr, 2020
COVID-19 deaths 4 to 7 X more likely if Diabetic, Hypertensive, or CVD - meta-analysis March 2020 24 Mar, 2020
Risk of enveloped virus infection is increased 50 percent if poor Vitamin D Receptor - meta-analysis Dec 2018 10 Mar, 2020
Bone quality improved 2X by Vitamin D plus Vitamin K2 (trend) – meta-analysis March 2020 09 Mar, 2020
Multiple Sclerosis 2X-3X more likely if poor Vitamin D Receptor – Meta-analysis Feb 2020 26 Feb, 2020
Alzheimer’s Disease risk is 1.9 X higher if Vitamin D deficient- meta-analysis Feb 2020 06 Feb, 2020
Multiple Sclerosis: 10 percent fewer relapses for each 10 ng higher level of vitamin D – Meta-analysis April 2020 30 Jan, 2020
Parkinson’s disease 1.6X more likely if a poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis Jan 2020 28 Jan, 2020
Melanoma 2.1 X more likely if low vitamin D – meta-analysis Jan 2020 11 Jan, 2020
Vitamin D does not reduce blood pressure in healthy people (no hypertension, etc) – Meta-analysis Jan 2020 10 Jan, 2020
Glyphosate (Roundup) increases risk of NH lymphoma by 41 percent – meta-analysis July 2019 09 Jan, 2020
Breast Cancer risk reduced 17 percent by 1 hour of daily summer sun – meta-analysis Jan 2020 07 Jan, 2020
Autism 2X more likely if poor Vitamin D Receptor (yet again) – meta-analysis Jan 2020 05 Jan, 2020
Multiple Sclerosis 40 percent more likely if mother had low vitamin D – meta-analysis Jan 2020 04 Jan, 2020
Risk of Multiple Sclerosis varies with the Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis Dec 2019 26 Dec, 2019
Hip fractures not prevented by Vitamin D (800 IU daily or large quarterly or annual doses) – meta-analysis – Dec 2019 21 Dec, 2019
Liver Cancer – higher risk if poor genes (Vitamin D receptor etc) – meta-analysis Dec 2019 14 Dec, 2019
Arterial stiffness reduced if use at least 2,000 IU of Vitamin D for 4 months – meta-analysis Dec 2019 06 Dec, 2019
Psoriasis is associated with 6 ng less vitamin D – meta-analysis Nov 2019 06 Dec, 2019
Colon cancer both prevented and treated by Vitamin D – meta-analysis Dec 2019 04 Dec, 2019
Blood vessels not helped by small vitamin D doses – meta-analysis Dec 2019 28 Nov, 2019
Inflammatory Bowel Disease 1.5 X more likely if low vitamin D – meta-analysis Dec 2019 26 Nov, 2019
Parkinson’s disease 20 percent more likely in Asians if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis April 2019 22 Nov, 2019
Alzheimer’s Disease risk is 1.3X higher if Vitamin D deficient – meta-analysis Nov 2019 16 Nov, 2019
Asthmatics less able to breathe if low vitamin D – meta-analysis Nov 2019 14 Nov, 2019
Stroke risks increased if low Vitamin D: Death 3.6 X, recurrence 5.5 X – Meta-analysis Nov 2019 11 Nov, 2019
Risk of Cancer increased if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis of 73 studies Jan 2016 09 Nov, 2019
Obesity 1.5 X more likely if poor Vitamin D Receptor – meta-analysis Nov 2019 05 Nov, 2019
Vitamin D cut dental caries in half 80 years ago – meta-analysis 2013 29 Oct, 2019
Acne 3X more likely if low Vitamin D – meta-analysis Oct 2019 25 Oct, 2019
Asthma is 20 percent more likely with a poor Vitamin D Receptor gene – meta-analysis Oct 2019 23 Oct, 2019
African Vitamin D - 60% have less than 30 ng – Meta-analysis Oct 2019 19 Oct, 2019
Is low Vitamin D just a marker of disease - March 2023        
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