MEDICAL NEWS:
VITAMIN D SUPPLEMENTS APPEAR TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH LOWER RISK OF DEATH
Sept. 13, 2007 — Individuals who take vitamin D supplements appear to have a
lower risk of death from any cause over an average follow-up time of six years,
according to a meta-analysis of 18 previously published studies in the September
10 issue of Archives of Internal Medicine, a journal of the American
Medical Association.
Past studies have suggested that deficiencies in vitamin D might be
associated with a higher risk of death from cancer, heart disease and diabetes —
illnesses that account for 60 percent to 70 percent of deaths in high-income
nations, according to background information in the article. "If the
associations made between vitamin D and these conditions were consistent, then
interventions effectively strengthening vitamin D status should result in
reduced total mortality," the authors write.
Philippe Autier, M.D., of the International Agency for Research on Cancer,
Lyon, France, and Sara Gandini, Ph.D., of the European Institute of Oncology in
Milano, Italy, searched for randomized controlled trials of vitamin D
supplements published before November 2006. They analyzed 18 separate trials
that included 57,311 participants and evaluated doses of vitamin D ranging from
300 to 2,000 international units, with an average dose of 528 international
units. Most commercially available supplements contain between 400 and 600
international units.
Over an average follow-up period of 5.7 years, 4,777 of the participants
died. Individuals who took vitamin D had a 7 percent lower risk of death than
those who did not. In the nine trials that collected blood samples, those who
took supplements had an average 1.4- to 5.2-fold higher blood level of vitamin D
than those who did not.
"Mechanisms by which vitamin D supplementation would decrease all-cause
mortality are not clear," the authors write. Vitamin D could inhibit some
mechanisms by which cancer cells proliferate, or it may boost the function of
blood vessels or the immune system, they note.
"In conclusion, the intake of ordinary doses of vitamin D supplements seems
to be associated with decreases in total mortality rates," the authors write.
"The relationship between baseline vitamin D status, dose of vitamin D
supplements and total mortality rates remains to be investigated.
Population-based, placebo-controlled randomized trials in people 50 years or
older for at least six years with total mortality as the main end point should
be organized to confirm these findings."
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