Immune Modulation by Vitamin D: Special Emphasis on Its Role in Prevention and Treatment of Cancer.
Study Goal
The researchers were attempting to determine the immune-modulating effects of vitamin D and its potential role as a coadjuvant in treating prostate, breast, colorectal cancers, and melanoma.
Results Summary
The study found that vitamin D may benefit certain cancers during treatment, with noted differences between white and black patients. It suggests vitamin D could become a valid coadjuvant in cancer therapy.
Population
Patients with prostate, breast, colorectal cancers, and melanoma, with noted racial differences (white and black patients).
Effective Dosage
Not mentioned
Duration
Not mentioned
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
vitamin D | neutral | mineral and bone homeostasis | - | - | has been known to be involved in | #1 |
vitamin D | neutral | osteoporosis and rickets | - | - | main use was in treating | #2 |
vitamin D | neutral | immune-modulating agent | - | - | is an | #3 |
vitamin D | neutral | several diseases, including autoimmune diseases | - | - | may also have a role in | #4 |
vitamin D | neutral | prostate, breast, and colorectal cancers and melanoma | - | - | apparently benefit from | #5 |
vitamin D | neutral | cancer | - | - | has the potential to become a valid coadjuvant in the treatment of | #6 |
PURPOSE: Vitamin D has been known to be involved in mineral and bone homeostasis for many years. In the past its main use was in treating osteoporosis and rickets. In recent years it was found that vitamin D is an immune-modulating agent and may also have a role in several diseases, including autoimmune diseases. The immune-modulating effects appear to be mediated by vitamin D interaction with the vitamin D receptor (VDR) that has transcriptional effects and is expressed on various cell types, especially those of the immune system. Immunologic and rheumatologic diseases were the first to be studied, but at the moment the spotlight is on the interactions between tumor cells and vitamin D. This review focuses on four forms of cancer that apparently benefit from a vitamin D supplementation during treatment: prostate, breast, and colorectal cancers and melanoma. Several studies reported that differences exist between white and black patients, which we discuss in the review. METHODS: We systematically searched PubMed for studies published in English. The search terms included vitamin D, cancer, breast, colorectal, prostate, and melanoma. FINDINGS AND IMPLICATIONS: Our findings show that vitamin D has the potential to become a valid coadjuvant in the treatment of cancer.