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Critical Appraisal of Large Vitamin D Randomized Controlled Trials

Authors :
Stefan Pilz
Christian Trummer
Verena Theiler-Schwetz
Martin R. Grübler
Nicolas D. Verheyen
Balazs Odler
Spyridon N. Karras
Armin Zittermann
Winfried März
Source :
Nutrients, Nutrients, Vol 14, Iss 303, p 303 (2022)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

As a consequence of epidemiological studies showing significant associations of vitamin D deficiency with a variety of adverse extra-skeletal clinical outcomes including cardiovascular diseases, cancer, and mortality, large vitamin D randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been designed and conducted over the last few years. The vast majority of these trials did not restrict their study populations to individuals with vitamin D deficiency, and some even allowed moderate vitamin D supplementation in the placebo groups. In these RCTs, there were no significant effects on the primary outcomes, including cancer, cardiovascular events, and mortality, but explorative outcome analyses and meta-analyses revealed indications for potential benefits such as reductions in cancer mortality or acute respiratory infections. Importantly, data from RCTs with relatively high doses of vitamin D supplementation did, by the vast majority, not show significant safety issues, except for trials in critically or severely ill patients or in those using very high intermittent vitamin D doses. The recent large vitamin D RCTs did not challenge the beneficial effects of vitamin D regarding rickets and osteomalacia, that therefore continue to provide the scientific basis for nutritional vitamin D guidelines and recommendations. There remains a great need to evaluate the effects of vitamin D treatment in populations with vitamin D deficiency or certain characteristics suggesting a high sensitivity to treatment. Outcomes and limitations of recently published large vitamin D RCTs must inform the design of future vitamin D or nutrition trials that should use more personalized approaches.

Details

ISSN :
20726643
Volume :
14
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nutrients
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e9eddcb8b0276a1899319b108d04644c