Vitamin D insufficiency.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the effects of vitamin D supplementation on health outcomes, including fractures, falls, and potential nonskeletal benefits, while considering interactions with calcium intakes.
Results Summary
Vitamin D supplementation reduces the risk of fractures and falls in adults, but evidence for other benefits is primarily based on observational studies, requiring further clinical trials for confirmation.
Population
Adults
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
Interaction with calcium intakes mentioned, but no specific medications, foods, or other supplements noted.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vitamin D supplementation | decrease | fractures | adults | - | reduces the risk | #1 |
vitamin D supplementation | decrease | falls | adults | - | reduces the risk | #2 |
Vitamin D deficiency, which classically manifests as bone disease (either rickets or osteomalacia), is characterized by impaired bone mineralization. More recently, the term vitamin D insufficiency has been used to describe low levels of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D that may be associated with other disease outcomes. Reliance on a single cutoff value to define vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency is problematic because of the wide individual variability of the functional effects of vitamin D and interaction with calcium intakes. In adults, vitamin D supplementation reduces the risk of fractures and falls. The evidence for other purported beneficial effects of vitamin D is primarily based on observational studies. We selected studies with the strongest level of evidence for clinical decision making related to vitamin D and health outcomes from our personal libraries of the vitamin D literature and from a search of the PubMed database using the term vitamin D in combination with the following terms related to the potential nonskeletal benefits of vitamin D: mortality, cardiovascular, diabetes mellitus, cancer, multiple sclerosis, allergy, asthma, infection, depression, psychiatric, and pain. Conclusive demonstration of these benefits awaits the outcome of controlled clinical trials.