| Literature DB >> 29943744 |
F Vellekkatt1, V Menon1.
Abstract
Background: There is a need to develop and periodically evaluate new treatment strategies in major depression due to the high burden of nonresponse and inadequate response to antidepressants. Aim: We aimed to assess the effect of vitamin D supplementation on depression symptom scores among individuals with clinically diagnosed major depression. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: Depressive disorder; meta-analysis; randomized controlled trials; vitamin D
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 29943744 PMCID: PMC6515787 DOI: 10.4103/jpgm.JPGM_571_17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Postgrad Med ISSN: 0022-3859 Impact factor: 1.476
Characteristics of included studies (n=4)
| Study | Region | Type of RCT | Sample size (intervention vs control) | Intervention | Comparator | Duration of study | Primary Outcome measure for effect size calculation | Effect size (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang | China | Double blind | 746 (373 vs 373) | 50,000 IU/wk oral Vitamin D3 | Placebo | 52 weeks | BDI score | 0.5632 (0.4167-0.7097) |
| Sepehrmanesh | Iran | Double blind | 40 (20 vs 20) | 50,000 IU/wk oral Vitamin D3 | Placebo | 8 weeks | BDI score | 0.4876 (−0.1465-1.1217) |
| Mozaffari-Khosravi | Iran | Nonblinded | 120 (40 vs 40 vs 40) | 300,000/150,000 IU I.M single dose Vitamin D3 | No treatment | 12 weeks | BDI score | 0.6988 (0.2437-1.1539) |
| Khoraminya | Iran | Double blind | 42 (21 vs 21) | 1500 IU oral Vitamin D3 + 20 mg Fluoxetine daily | Fluoxetine alone | 8 weeks | HAM-D score | 1.0268 (0.1294-1.9242) |
RCT: Randomized controlled trial, CI: Confidence intervals, BDI: Beck depression inventory, HAM-D: Hamilton depression rating scale, IU: International units
Characteristics of excluded studies (n=13)
| Study | Region | Type of trial | Sample size | Intervention | Comparator | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hogberg | Sweden | Case series | 48 | Daily dosage of oral Vitamin D3 | None | Depressed adolescents were investigated for vitamin D deficiency. Those found deficient were supplemented by vitamin D |
| Stokes | Germany | Cross-sectional & interventional analysis. | 111 | 20000 IU/week oral Vitamin D3 | None | Patients with chronic liver disease were assessed for vitamin D deficiency and depressive symptoms. Depressive symptoms were reassessed after vitamin D supplementation |
| Shipowick | USA | Prospective interventional analysis | 9 | Oral vitamin D3 | None | A pilot study to assess effect of vitamin D supplementation on depressive symptoms in women during winter |
| Bertone Johnson | USA | Double blinded RCT | 36282 | 400 IU/day oral Vitamin D3 | Placebo | Improvement in depression scores in postmenopausal women with vitamin D supplementation were assessed |
| Jorde | Norway | Double blind RCT | 441 | 20000 vs 40000 IU/week oral vitamin D3 | Placebo | Improvement in depressive symptom scores after vitamin D supplementation |
| Yalamanchi | USA | Double blind RCT | 488 | Hormone therapy, Oral Vitamin D3 | Placebo | Examine the effect of hormone therapy and calcitriol on depression scores in older postmenopausal women and to determine whether the response was associated with polymorphisms of estrogen receptor > and vitamin D receptor |
| Vaziri | Iran | RCT | 169 | 2000 IU/day oral vitamin D3 | None | Effect of vitamin D supplementation on depressive symptoms in pregnant women were examined |
| Mousa | Australia | Double blind RCT | 63 | Oral vitamin D3 | Placebo | Whether vitamin D levels were associated with depressive symptoms and whether supplementation reduced depressive symptoms who are obese and vitamin D deficient, but otherwise healthy i.e., Not clinically depressed |
| Kjaergaard | Norway | Case-control study & RCT | 243 | Oral vitamin D3 | Placebo | Effect of vitamin D supplement on depression scores in people with low vitamin D levels were evaluated |
| Frandsen | Denmark | Double blind RCT | 34 | 70 microgram oral vitamin D3 daily | Placebo | Vitamin D supplementation was evaluated for treatment of seasonal affective symptoms in healthcare professionals |
| Zanetidou | Italy | Non-randomized trial | 39 | 300000 IU oral vitamin D along with Anti-depressants | Routine anti-depressants | Vitamin D was additionally given to the routine anti-depressants in the study group to compare those on only antidepressants who were not willing to take oral vitamin D |
| Marsh | USA | Double blind RCT | 33 | 5000 IU vitamin D/day | Placebo | Patients with DSM IV bipolar depression and vitamin D deficiency were selected and randomized to give vitamin D to evaluate whether vitamin D adjunct reduces bipolar depression |
| de Koning | Netherlands | Double blind RCT | 155 | 1200 IU vitamin D/day | Placebo | Study aims to elucidate effects of vitamin D supplementation on depressive symptoms and physical functioning in older adults |
RCT: Randomized controlled trial, DSM IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, IU: International units
Figure 1Flowchart for literature search
Risk of bias assessment for included trials (n=4)
| Study | Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Allocation concealment (Selection bias) | Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) | Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | Incomplete outcome data addressed (attrition bias) | Selective reporting (reporting bias) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wang | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Sepehrmanesh | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| Mozaffari-Khosravi | Yes | Not mentioned | No | No | No | No |
| Khoraminya | Yes | Not mentioned | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Figure 2Forest plot for included trials
Figure 3Funnel plot for publication bias