| Literature DB >> 27209163 |
Soodeh Razeghi Jahromi1,2, Mohammad Ali Sahraian3,4, Mansoureh Togha5,6, Behnaz Sedighi7, Vahid Shayegannejad8, Alireza Nickseresht9, Shahriar Nafissi10, Niayesh Mohebbi11, Nastran Majdinasab12, Mohsen Foroughipour13, Masoud Etemadifar14, Nahid Beladi Moghadam15, Hormoz Ayramlou16, Fereshteh Ashtari8, Shekoofe Alaie1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accumulating evidences from experimental, epidemiologic and clinical studies support the potential linkage between poor vitamin D status and the risk of developing Multiple Sclerosis (MS), as well as, an adverse disease course. However, the results of the trials on the clinical outcomes of vitamin D supplementation in MS patients are less consistent which brought many discrepancies in routine practice. In this article we presented a summary of a symposium on vitamin D and MS. In this symposium we aim to review the current data about the relationship between vitamin D and MS, and suggest management guides for practicing neurologists. DISCUSSION: Generally, supplementation seems to be reasonable for all MS and clinically isolated syndrome (Rinaldi et al., Toxins 7:129-37, 2015) patients with serum 25(OH)D level below 40 ng/ml. In patients with vitamin D insufficiency or deficiency, a large replacing dose (e.g. 50,000 IU capsules of D per week for 8-12 week) is recommended. Panel also suggested: the checking of the serum vitamin D, and calcium level, as well as, patients' compliance after the initial phase; a maintenance treatment of 1500-2000 IU daily or equivalent intermittent (weekly, biweekly or monthly) Dose, considering the patient's compliance; routine check of serum vitamin D level at least two times a year especially at the beginning of spring and autumn; Serum vitamin D evaluation for first degree relatives of MS patients at high risk age and supplementation in case of insufficiency (25(OH)D less than 40 ng/ml); correction of vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency before pregnancy, as well as, a daily dose of 1500-2000 IU or equivalent biweekly intake in 2nd and 3rd trimesters; stopping supplementation if 25(OH)D serum level exceeds 100 ng/ml. Although the results of high power studies are not available, correcting vitamin D status seems plausible in all MS and CIS patients. Maintaining the serum 25(OH)D level between 40 and 100 ng/ml is not known to exert adverse effect. More ever, it might be associated with lower disease activity.Entities:
Keywords: Assessment; Etiology; Multiple sclerosis; Pathogenesis; Treatment; Vitamin D
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27209163 PMCID: PMC4875642 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-016-0586-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Clinical trials on vitamin D for MS treatment
| First author, date | Method | Participants | Intervention | Neurological/clinical measures | Neurological/clinical result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burton, 2010 [ | open-label randomized prospective controlled 52-week trial | MS patients | -Treatment: Increasing vitamin D3 dose up to 40,000 IU/d for 28 weeks, followed by 10,000 IU/d for 12 weeks, downtitrated to 0 IU/day plus 1200 mg calcium/d throughout the study | EDSS, serum calcium level | No significant difference in relapse rate |
| Kampman, 2012 [ | Randomized double-blind controlled 96-week trial | MS patients | -Treatment: 20,000 IU vitamin D3/week, plus 500 mg calcium/day | annual relapse rate, MSFC, EDSS, fatigue and grip strength | No significant difference in annual relapse rate, MSFC, EDSS, fatigue and grip strength |
| Shaygannejad, 2012 [ | Randomized double-blind controlled 12-month trial | RRMS | -Treatment: 0.25 mcg calcitriol/day increased to 0.5 mcg/d after 2 weeks | Relapse rate and EDSS | No significant difference in relapse rate and EDSS |
| Soilu-Hänninen, 2005 [ | Randomized double-blind controlled 1-year trial | RRMS | -Treatment: 20,000 IU vitamin D3/week | EDSS, relapse rate, timed 10 foot tandem walk test, timed 25 foot walk test, brain MRI | Significant reduction in the number of T1 enhancing lesions and EDSS in treatment group |
| Stein, 2011 [ | Randomized double-blind controlled 24-months trial | RRMS | Treatment:6000 IU vitamin D2 twice daily +1000 IU vitaminD2 daily | MRI, relapse rate, EDSS | No significant difference in MRI findings. Follow-up EDSS was higher following high dose D2 (after adjusting for baseline EDSS), relapse rate was significantly higher in high dose group |
| Ongoing trials | |||||
| Clinicaltrials.gov identification number | Duration | Estimated enrollment | Intervention | ||
| NCT01198132 | 96 weeks | 250 | Treatment: 100,000 IU vitamin D3/month + 3 rebif/week | ||
| NCT01490502 | 104 weeks | 172 | Treatment: 5000 IU vitamin D3/day + Copaxone | ||
| NCT01024777 | 26 weeks | 40 | Treatment: 10,000 IU vitamin D3/day | ||
| NCT01285401 | 96 weeks | 358 | Treatment: 6670 IU vitamin D3/day for 4 weeks, 14,007 IU vitamin D3/day for the following 92 weeks + 3 Rebif /week | ||
| NCT01440062 | 78 weeks | 80 | Treatment: 20,400 IU vitamin D3 on alternate day + Interferon ß-1b | ||