Adjunctive vitamin D therapy in various diseases in children: a scenario according to standard guideline.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate adherence to standard guidelines for adjunctive vitamin D therapy in pediatric diseases and assess the impact of socioeconomic status on vitamin D consumption.
Results Summary
The study found poor adherence to standard guidelines for vitamin D testing and dosing in pediatric diseases, with significant associations between socioeconomic status and vitamin D consumption. Adjunctive vitamin D was prescribed across multiple diseases, but adherence to recommended practices was low.
Population
400 ambulatory pediatric patients at Children's Hospital, Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences Islamabad.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Data collected from November 2017 to June 2018 (study duration not explicitly stated).
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
adjunctive vitamin D therapy | neutral | various diseases and comorbidities | pediatric patients | - | was being prescribed | #1 |
adjunctive vitamin D therapy | neutral | high-risk vitamin D deficiency diseases | pediatric patients | - | adherence to testing was | #2 |
vitamin D testing | neutral | seizures | pediatric patients | 3.8% | adherence was | #3 |
vitamin D testing | neutral | bone deformities | pediatric patients | 13.3% | adherence was | #4 |
vitamin D testing | neutral | steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome | pediatric patients | 0.0% | adherence was | #5 |
vitamin D testing | neutral | cerebral palsy | pediatric patients | 5.9% | adherence was | #6 |
vitamin D testing | neutral | meningitis | pediatric patients | 14.3% | adherence was | #7 |
prescribed vitamin D dose | neutral | various diseases | pediatric patients | 41.3% | adherence was | #8 |
adjunctive vitamin D therapy | neutral | disease management | children | - | overall poor adherence was observed | #9 |
vitamin D supplementation | decrease | vitamin D supplementation consumption | children | - | low socioeconomic status affects consumption | #10 |
vitamin D supplementation | decrease | vitamin D supplementation consumption | mothers | - | low socioeconomic status affects consumption | #11 |
BACKGROUND: Adherence to standard guidelines is imperative when question comes to disease management. The present study aimed to evaluate the administration of adjunctive vitamin D therapy in various diseases, its adherence to standard guideline and the effect of socioeconomic status on the consumption of vitamin D in children. METHODS: Cross sectional observational study was conducted among 400 ambulatory pediatric patients at Children's Hospital, Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences Islamabad, from November 2017 to June 2018. Data were collected by a self-designed structured questionnaire from the patient's medical chart. Adjunctive vitamin D therapy adherence was evaluated by the U. S endocrinology clinical practice guideline of vitamin D deficiency. The association between socioeconomic status and consumption of vitamin D was examined by chi-square. Alpha value (p ≤ 0.005) was considered statistically significant. Statistical analysis was done by SPSS version 25. RESULTS: In 400 patients, 9 diseases and 21 comorbid conditions were identified, in which adjunctive vitamin D therapy was prescribed. Adherence to vitamin D testing in high-risk vitamin D deficiency diseases as; seizures (3.8%), bone deformities (13.3%), steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (0.0%), cerebral palsy (5.9%) and meningitis (14.3%). Adherence to prescribed vitamin D dose was in (41.3%) patients in various diseases. Significant association (p < 0.05) was found between socioeconomic status and consumption of vitamin D in children and mothers. CONCLUSIONS: It was found that adjunctive vitamin D was being prescribed in various diseases and comorbidities. Overall poor adherence to the standard guideline was observed in disease management in children. Low socioeconomic status affects vitamin D supplementation consumption in children.