Restoration of regulatory and effector T cell balance and B cell homeostasis in systemic lupus erythematosus patients through vitamin D supplementation
Benjamin Terrier, Nicolas Derian, Yoland Schoindre, Wahiba Chaara, Guillaume Geri, Noel Zahr, Kuberaka Mariampillai, Michelle Rosenzwajg, Wassila Carpentier, Lucile Musset, Jean-Charles Piette, Adrien Six, David Klatzmann, David Saadoun, Patrice Cacoub and Nathalie Costedoat-Chalumeau
Arthritis Research & Therapy 2012, 14:R221 doi:10.1186/ar4060
Published: 17 October 2012
Introduction: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is a T and B cell-dependent autoimmune disease characterized by the appearance of autoantibodies, a global regulatory T cells (Tregs) depletion and an increase in Th17 cells. Recent studies have shown the multifaceted immunomodulatory effects of vitamin D, notably the expansion of Tregs and the decrease of Th1 and Th17 cells. A significant correlation between higher disease activity and lower serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels [25(OH)D] was also shown.
Methods: In this prospective study, we evaluated the safety and the immunological effects of vitamin D supplementation (100 000 IU of cholecalciferol per week for 4 weeks, followed by 100 000 IU of cholecalciferol per month for 6 months.) in 20 SLE patients with hypovitaminosis D.
Results: Serum 25(OH)D levels dramatically increased under vitamin D supplementation from 18.7+/-6.7 at day 0 to 51.4+/-14.1 (p<0.001) at 2 months and 41.5+/-10.1 ng/mL (p<0.001) at 6 months. Vitamin D was well tolerated and induced a preferential increase of naive CD4+ T cells, an increase of regulatory T cells and a decrease of effector Th1 and Th17 cells. Vitamin D also induced a decrease of memory B cells and anti-DNA antibodies. No modification of the prednisone dosage or initiation of new immunosuppressant agents was needed in all patients.
We did not observe SLE flare during the 6 months follow-up period.
Conclusions: This preliminary study suggests the beneficial role of vitamin D in SLE patients and needs to be confirmed in randomized controlled trials.
 Download the PDF from VitaminDWiki.
See also VitaminDWiki
- All items in category Lupus and Vitamin D
78 items - Lupus 8X more likely to not even have 20 ng of vitamin D – May 2011
- Lupus flareups cut in half by just 2,000 IU of vitamin D – RCT Dec 2012
- Lupus and Vitamin D: good evidence, no conclusions – Review Jan 2013
- Overview Loading of vitamin D
- Proof that Vitamin D Works the study on this page is one of the proofs that vitamin D treats diseases
- One pill every two weeks gives you all the vitamin D most adults need
which is exactly 100,000 IU/month, as used on the study on this pageSee also web
- Vitamin D may benefit lupus patients Vitamin D Council. Good description of this study
35133 visitors, last modified 02 Sep, 2020,