Giving vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) to predominantly elderly women, mainly in
institutional care, seems to increase survival. These women are likely to be vitamin D deficient with a significant risk of
falls and fractures. This is the key conclusion in a
systematic review published in the latest edition of The Cochrane
Library.
Up until now there has been no clear view on whether there
is a real benefit of taking vitamin D. "A Cochrane meta-analysis published only
a couple of years ago found that there was some evidence for benefit, but it
could not find an effect on mortality. We were, however, aware that more trials
had been published and wanted to assess the effects of vitamin D when you added
all the data together," said Dr Goran Bjelakovic, who works at Department of
Internal Medicine - Gastroenterology and Hepatology, at the University of Nis,
in Serbia and at The Cochrane Hepato-Biliary Group at The Copenhagen Trial Unit
in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The eight-strong international team of
researchers identified 50 randomised trials that together had 94,148
participants. They had a mean age of 74 years, and 79% were women. "Our analyses
suggest that vitamin D3 reduces mortality by about 6%. This means that you need
to give about 200 people vitamin D3 for around two years to save one additional
life," says Bjelakovic.
There were no significant benefits of taking
other forms of vitamin D such as vitamin D2, and the active forms of the
vitamin, alfacalcidol or calcitriol. However, the researchers point out that
they could only find much less data relating to these types of vitamin D and so
these conclusions should be taken with caution. "We need to have more randomised
trials that look specifically to see whether these forms of vitamin D do or
don't have benefits," says Bjelakovic. His team did conclude that alfacalcidol
and calcitriol significantly increased the risk of hypercalcaemia, and vitamin
D3 combined with calcium significantly increased the risk of kidney stones.
There have been reports
and comments that taking vitamin D can reduce the risk of getting cancer, but this work
showed no evidence that vitamin D reduced cancer-related mortality.
"Previous reviews of preventive trials of vitamin D have not included as
much information and have not examined the separate influence of different forms
of vitamin D on mortality. By taking data from a larger number of trials we have
been able to shed much more light on this important issue," says Bjelakovic.
Source:
Jennifer Beal
Wiley-Blackwell
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