| Literature DB >> 24455293 |
Rashmi Ranjan Das1, Meenu Singh2, Inusha Panigrahi2, Sushree Samiksha Naik3.
Abstract
Background. Studies have found an increased incidence of vitamin D deficiency in children with pneumonia; however, there is no conclusive data regarding the direct effect of vitamin D supplementation in acute pneumonia. Methods. A comprehensive search was performed of the major electronic databases till September 2013. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) comparing treatment with vitamin D3 versus placebo in children ≤5 years old with pneumonia were included. Results. Out of 32 full text articles, 2 RCTs including 653 children were eligible for inclusion. One trial used a single 100,000 unit of oral vitamin D3 at the onset of pneumonia. There was no significant difference in the mean (±SD) number of days to recovery between the vitamin D3 and placebo arms (P = 0.17). Another trial used oral vitamin D3 (1000 IU for <1 year and 2000 IU for >1 year) for 5 days in children with severe pneumonia. Median duration of resolution of severe pneumonia was similar in the two groups (intervention, 72 hours; placebo, 64 hours). Duration of hospitalization and time to resolution of tachypnea, chest retractions, and inability to feed were also comparable between the two groups. Conclusions. Oral vitamin D supplementation does not help children under-five with acute pneumonia.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24455293 PMCID: PMC3880753 DOI: 10.1155/2013/459160
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Pediatr ISSN: 2090-469X
Characteristics of included studies.
| Study | Setting | Participants | Intervention | Outcomes measured | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manaseki-Holland et al. [ | Outpatient of inner-city hospital, Afghanistan. | [Vitamin D = 224, placebo = 229]. | A single 100,000 unit of oral vitamin D3 at onset of pneumonia. | Time to resolution of pneumonia/recovery for 48 consecutive hours, treatment failure, and discharge from hospital. | Children with wheezing were excluded. No adverse effects noted. Microbiological and/or radiological diagnosis not done. Serum vitamin D3 level was not measured. |
| Choudhary and Gupta [ | Inpatient of a tertiary care hospital, India. | [Vitamin D = 100, placebo = 100]. | Oral vitamin D3 (1000 IU for <1 year and 2000 IU for >1 year) for 5 days. | Primary: time to resolution of severe pneumonia (absence of lower chest indrawing, hypoxia or cyanosis, lethargy, and inability to feed). | Sixty-three children had past history of pneumonia. Five children had clinical evidence of rickets. One-third of children had wheezing at enrollment. No major adverse effects noted. Microbiological and/or radiological diagnosis not done. Serum vitamin D3 level was not measured. |
Figure 1Flow diagram of search results. RCTs: Randomized controlled trials.
Assessment of risk of bias by using Cochrane risk of bias tool.
| Risk of bias parameters | Manaseki-Holland et al. [ | Choudhary and Gupta [ |
|---|---|---|
| Adequate sequence generation | Yes | Yes |
| Allocation concealment | Yes | Yes |
|
| Yes | Yes |
|
| Yes | Yes |
|
| No | No |
|
| No | No |