| Literature DB >> 31405041 |
Sonal R Hattangdi-Haridas1, Susan A Lanham-New1, Wilfred Hing Sang Wong2, Marco Hok Kung Ho2, Andrea L Darling3.
Abstract
Research has investigated 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) levels in the Atopic Dermatitis (AD) population, as well as changes in AD severity after vitamin D (VitD) supplementation. We performed an up-to-date systematic review and meta-analysis of these findings. Electronic searches of MEDLINE, EMBASE and COCHRANE up to February 2018 were performed. Observational studies comparing 25(OH)D between AD patients and controls, as well as trials documenting baseline serum 25(OH)D levels and clinical severity by either SCORAD/EASI scores, were included. Of the 1085 articles retrieved, sixteen were included. A meta-analysis of eleven studies of AD patients vs. healthy controls (HC) found a mean difference of -14 nmol/L (95% CI -25 to -2) for all studies and -16 nmol/L (95% CI -31 to -1) for the paediatric studies alone. A meta-analysis of three VitD supplementation trials found lower SCORAD by -11 points (95% CI -13 to -9, p < 0.00001). This surpasses the Minimal Clinical Important Difference for AD of 9.0 points (by 22%). There were greater improvements in trials lasting three months and the mean weighted dose of all trials was 1500-1600 IU/daily. Overall, the AD population, especially the paediatric subset, may be at high-risk for lower serum 25(OH)D. Supplementation with around 1600 IU/daily results in a clinically meaningful AD severity reduction.Entities:
Keywords: 25(OH)D; 25-hydroxyvitamin D; SCORAD; atopic dermatitis; case-control; meta-analysis; paediatric; randomised control trial; supplementation; systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31405041 PMCID: PMC6722944 DOI: 10.3390/nu11081854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram to show results of the search process and inclusions/exclusions.
Observational case-control studies of serum 25(OH)D levels in atopic dermatitis individuals compared to healthy controls.
| Case Control Study | Participants | Population-Total | Primary Study Outcome | Review Outcome Serum 25(OH)D Levels Observed | Secondary Study Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cheon 2015 (South Korea) [ | Paediatric OPD, median age 6 years | Serum 25(OH)D levels significantly lower in AD compared to HC. Lower levels in Moderate and Severe AD compared to Mild AD. | AD = 23 ± 2 ng/mL HC = 36 ± 3 ng/mL | <0.05 | ||
| D’Auria 2017 (Italy) [ | Paediatric OPD. Age 1–14 years, 43% Caucasians, skin phototype II or III according to Fitzpatrick skin type | Serum 25(OH)D levels statistically significant higher in HC than AD even after adjustment for age, sex and season ( | AD = 19 ng/mL, HC = 25 ng/mL | 0.04 | No association was found between serum 25(OH)D levels and AD severity. | |
| El Taieb 2013 (Egypt) [ | Patients from the OPD Clinic. Age 2–12 years | Mean Value of Serum Vitamin D in AD is much lower than HC. | AD = 5 ± 2 ng/mL, HC = 29 ± 2 ng/mL | <0.001 | Mean Serum 25(OH)D levels significantly higher in Mild AD (15 ± 4 ng/mL) vs. Moderate AD (6 ± 3 ng/mL) or Severe AD (0.3 ± 0.1 ng/mL). Individual SCORAD values showed significant inverse correlation with serum 25(OH) D Levels, | |
| Han 2015 [ | Patients: adult >18 years, child <18. Age: Adults: 26.8 ± 8.25 (18–51), Child 9.5 ± 4.27 (1–16) years | Serum 25(OH)D level significantly lower in AD children, not statistically different in AD adults. Overall not statistically different between 72 AD patients (12.43 ± 4.66 ng/mL) vs. 140 control (13.49 ± 6.23 ng/mL) ( | Child-AD = 15 ± 5 ng/mL, Child-HC = 16 ± 7 ng/mL. Adults-AD = 10 ± 4 ng/mL. Adult-HC = 11 ± 4 ng/mL | Child 0.04 | Difference in serum 25(OH)D levels of different AD severity not statistically different ( | |
| Noh 2014 (South Korea) [ | Patients AD-82, Asthma-38 HC-49 | AD patients had significantly lower Vitamin D levels compared to Asthmatic pts and healthy Controls ( | HC = 11 ± 1 ng/mL AD = 10 ± 1 ng/mL | 0.001 | Significant inverse correlation was observed for serum 25(OH)D levels and total body affected by eczema ( | |
| Sharma 2017 (India) [ | Patients from Dermatological OPD, ages 2–18 years | Lower Serum 25(OH)D levels in AD was statistically highly significant compared to HC | AD = 30 nmol/L, HC = 54 nmol/L | <0.001 | Significantly inverse correlation between Serum25(OH)D levels and SCORAD index. Mean serum 25(OH)D levels were significantly lower in AD vs. HC with superficial bacterial, fungal, viral infection. Levels were deficient in patients with AD (<20 nmol/L) and insufficient in (20–29 nmol/L) in HC with cutaneous infection. | |
| Su 2017 (Turkey) [ | Dermatology OPD, 2–16 years (mean 8·37); | No statistical significant difference in Mean Serum 25(OH)D levels of AD and HC. | AD = 16 ± 7 ng/mL HC = 20 ± 10 ng/mL | 0.07 | Significant inverse relationship between SCORAD scores and Serum 25(OH)D levels. Serum 25(OH)D levels statistically significantly lower in moderate and severe AD compared with mild AD ( | |
| Wang 2014 (Hong Kong) [ | Paediatric OPD ( | serum 25(OH)D levels higher in HC than AD. Inverse association seen between Serum VitD levels and SCORAD, Ness Scores. | AD = 29 ± 15 HC = 34 ± 15 nM | <0.001 | Higher percentage of AD had Serum 25(OH)D <25 nM vs. HC (47.8% vs. 26.6%). Serum 25(OH)D levels showed inverse associations with short-term, long-term AD severity, serum IgE and eosinophil levels. |
Showing data of serum 25(0H)D levels in the atopic dermatitis participants compared to healthy controls in included studies.
| Study | Case Study Type | n-Cases | n-HC | Age: Adult ‘A’ Child ‘C’ | Serum 25(OH)VitD Levels AD Baseline (ng/mL) | Serum 25(OH)VitD Levels AD Baseline (nmol/L) | Serum 25(OH)VitD Levels Healthy Controls (ng/mL) | Serum 25(OH)VitD Levels Healthy Controls (nmol/L) | Geographical Location by Latitude | VitD Deficient(D) Sufficient(S) Insufficient(I) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cheon 2015 [ | Case-Control | 91 | 32 | C | 23 ± 2 | 58 ± 4 | 36 ± 3 | 90 ± 7 | <0.05 | Korea | AD-I |
| D’Auria 2017 [ | Case-Control | 52 | 43 | C | 19 ± 7 | 48 ± 18 | 25 ± 13 | 62 ± 31 | 0.04 | Milan, Italy | AD-D |
| Di Filippo 2015 [ | Interventional | 39 | 20 | C | 23 ± 8 | 57 ± 20 | 20 ± 3 | 50 ± 8 | Not Specified | Cheiti, Italy | AD-I |
| El Taieb 2013 [ | Case-Control | 29 | 30 | C | 5 ± 2 | 14 ± 5 | 29 ± 2 | 72 ± 6 | <0.001 | Egypt | AD-D |
| Han 2015 [ | Case-Control | 72 | 140 | A,C | 12 ± 5 | 31 ± 12 | 14 ± 6 | 34 ± 16 | Korea | AD-D | |
| Han 2015 Adult [ | Case-Control | 39 | 70 | A | 10 ± 3 | 26 ± 8 | 11 ± 4 | 27 ± 11 | Korea | AD-D | |
| Han 2015 Child [ | Case-Control | 33 | 70 | C | 15 ± 5 | 38 ± 11·58 | 16 ± 7 | 41 ± 17 | 0.04 | Korea | AD-D |
| Hata 2014 [ | Interventional | 30 | 30 | A,C | 28 ± 11 | 71 ± 28 | 30 ± 12 | 75 ± 31 | Not specified | Multicentric | AD-I |
| Noh 2014 [ | Case-Control | 82 | 49 | A,C | 10 ± 0.6 | 24 ± 2 | 11 ± 1 | 28 ± 2 | 0.001 | Korea | AD-D |
| Noh 2014—Child [ | Case-Control | 27 | 12 | C | 11 ± 5 | 27 ± 12 | 13 ± 5 | 31 ± 14 | Retrieved from supplied data | Korea | AD-D |
| Noh 2014 Adult [ | Case-Control | 34 | 23 | A | 9 ± 4 | 21 ± 11 | 10 ± 6 | 25 ± 15 | Retrieved from supplied data | Korea | AD-D |
| Samochocki 2013 [ | Interventional | 95 | 58 | A | 23 ± 13 | 58 ± 33 | 24 ± 13 | 59 ± 32 | >0.05 | Poland | AD-D |
| Sharma 2017 [ | Case-Control | 40 | 40 | C | 12 ± 3 | 30 ± 7 | 21 ± 3 | 54 ± 6 | <0.001 | Punjab, India | AD-D |
| Su 2017 [ | Case-Control | 60 | 37 | C | 16 ± 7 | 40 ± 7 | 20 ± 10 | 49 ± 26 | 0.07 | Turkey | AD-D |
| Wang 2014 [ | Case-Control | 498 | 328 | C | 11 ± 6 | 29 ± 15 | 14 ± 6 | 34 ± 15 | <0.001 | Hong Kong | AD-D |
Vitamin D status defined as a 25(OH)D—Deficiency <20 ng/mL (50 nmol/), Insufficiency 21–29 ng/mL (52.5–72.5 nmol/). Sufficiency >30 ng/mL (75 nmol/) [37].
Interventional studies of vitamin D supplementation in atopic dermatitis.
| Study | Interventional Design Type | Participants | Population- | Primary Study Outcome | Secondary Outcome | Serum 25(OH)D Levels Baseline (nmol/L) | VitD Deficient(D) Sufficient(S) Insufficient(I) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albenali 2016 (U.K.) [ | Clinical service evaluation of AD and Eczema Herpeticum (ADEH). VitD supplementation based on deficiency and additionally 6000 IU/daily for age 1–12 years, 10,000 IU/daily for age 12–18 years. Baseline population: 57% with VitD def, 26% suboptimal levels and 83% insufficient VitD level | Age 1–18 years | 25(OH)D level and SCORAD showed significant inverse relationship ( | 0.001 | Serum of AD was significantly correlated with LL-37 levels ( | - | - | |
| Amestejani 2012 (Iran) [ | Randomized double-blind placebo controlled trial, 1600 IU/daily cholecalciferol given for 60 days | Age 14 and older. | Population | Significant improvement of SCORAD and TIS (Three Item Severity Score) value under in VitD group of mild, moderate and severe AD ( | <0.005 | 23 ± 3 | D | |
| Di Filippo 2015 (Italy) [ | Interventional study—prospective longitudinal 1000 IU/daily 3 months. | Age 4 ± 3.15 year with AD and pre-pubertal Tanner stage 1. | Standard mean value of serum Vit D levels was insufficient and comparable with healthy controls. AD = 23 ± 8 HC = 20 ± 3. Improvement from baseline levels of serum 25(OH)D correlated with reduction in SCORAD index. Significant negative correlation between VitD change and SCORAD change ( | 0.01 | In AD, high rate of VitD insufficiency (74%) and deficiency (7%). Improvement in VitD levels after 3 months correlated with reduction in SCORAD and reduced inflammatory cytokines. | 57 ± 20 | I | |
| Hata 2014 (U.S.A-Multicenter) [ | Randomized double-blinded placebo controlled trial VitD3: 4000 IU/daily for 21 days | AD interventional = 30 (mean age of 31.2 year); placebo = 30 (mean age 31.9 year) | AD subject with Fitzpatrick Type V/VI skin had significantly lower serum 25(OH)D level 19 ng/mL comparing to type III/IV with a mean 25 OHD of 29 ng/mL ( | 0.05 | AD subject serum 25(OH)D inversely correlated with BMI ( | 29 (11) | D | |
| Javanbakht 2011 (Iran) [ | Randomized double-blind placebo controlled trial. 1600 IU/daily for 60 days | Age 13–45, SCORAD 10–70, | SCORAD: significant reduction of 34.8% in VitD group, placebo group: 28.9%. Change in objective SCORAD: VitD group: 38%, placebo group: 31%. Change in intensity 37% VitD group, 25% in placebo group. | 0.004 | No associate relationship with SCORAD and serum 25(OH)VitD3 level. Strong reduction in usage of topical steroid. | - | - | |
| Samochocki 2013 (Poland) [ | Interventional study from a cross-sectional study not randomised or controlled. Blinding done for supplementation and SCORAD evaluation. 2000 IU/daily 3 months, Jan to March | Age 18–50 years | Supplementation improved Vit D levels from deficient to insufficient levels, statistically significant decrease in AD severity ( | <0.05 | After 3 months supplementation mean total IgE level significantly lower than before (995 ± 1681 vs. 1148 ± 19 IU/mL) | 19 ± 8 | D | |
| Tsotra 2017 (Greece) [ | Interventional study 2 months, Vitamin D supplementation 1200 IU in mild AD (SCORAD < 40), 2400 IU in severe AD (SCORAD > 40) | Children with AD, Severe and mild (no other information) | Baseline SCORAD differed significantly between mild AD, severe AD group, | 0.001 | Levels of serum cathelicidin child with AD significantly higher than those with children in control group. AD 61 (261–129) | - | - | |
| Udompataikul 2015 (Thailand) [ | Randomized double-blind placebo controlled trial VitD 2000 IU/daily. | 1–18 years old. Mean age 8–28 years | Changes of VitD group vs. placebo group at week 4: Statistically significant reduction in SCORAD ( | 0.02 | Significant reduction documented in | 43 | D |
Vitamin D status defined as a 25(OH)D—Deficiency < 20 ng/mL (50 nmol/L), Insufficiency 21–29 ng/mL (52. 5–72. 5 nmol/L). Sufficiency >30 ng/mL (75 nmol/L) [37].
Data of interventional studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Study | Age: Adult ‘A’ Child ‘C’ | n-Cases | n-Controls | Serum 25(OH)D Levels Baseline(n/) | Serum 25(OH)D Levels after VitD Intervention (n/) | SCORAD before Intervention | SCORAD after Intervention | Percentage Improvement of SCORAD | Trial Period in Months | VitD Dosage IU. | Percentage Weight of Study as per Forest Plot | Calculation of Weighted Mean Dose per Study (I.U) | VitD Deficient(D) Sufficient(S) Insufficient(I) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amestejani 2012 [ | A, C | 24 | 24 | 23 ± 3 | 55.4 ± 10.8 | 25 ± 4 | 15 ± 3 | 38% | <0.05 | 2 | 1600 | 31 | 496 | D |
| Di Filippo 2015 [ | C | 22 | 22 | 57 ± 20 | 74 ± 26.8 | 46 ± 16 | 23 ± 15 | 51% | <0.001 | 3 | 1000 | 12.6 | 252 | I |
| Javanbakht 2011 [ | A,C | 12 | 12 | - | - | 36 ± 4 | 23 ± 3 | 35% | 0.004 | 2 | 1600 | 11.5 | 115 | - |
| Samochocki 2013 [ | A | 20 | 20 | 19 ± 8 | 33 ± 14 | 45 ± 16 | 26 ± 11 | 43% | 0.001 | 3 | 2000 | 29.3 | 469 | D |
| Udompataikul 2015 [ | C | 12 | 12 | 43 | 63 | 18·± 9 | 8·± 9 | 56% | 0.02 | 1 | 2000 | 15.6 | 312 | D |
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| 100% |
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Vitamin D status defined as a 25(OH)D—Deficiency <20 ng/mL (50 nmol/), Insufficiency 21–29 ng/mL (52. 5–72. 5 nmol/). Sufficiency >30 ng/mL (75 nmol/) [37]. * rounded value.
Figure 2Forest Plot for meta-analysis of serum 25(OH)D levels in atopic dermatitis population compared with healthy controls (nmol/L). References: Cheon 2015 [27]. D’Auria 2017 [28]. Di Filippo 2015 [29]. El Taeib 2013 [30]. Han 2015 [31]. Hata 2014 [35]. Noh 2014 [32]. Samochocki 2013 [33]. Sharma 2017 [25]. Su 2017 [34]. Wang 2014 [26].
Figure 3Forest Plot of comparison of serum 25(OH)D levels (nmol/L) in adult and paediatric atopic dermatitis populations versus their age-matched healthy controls, with sub-analysis by age group. References: Cheon 2015 [27]. D’Auria 2017 [28]. Di Filippo 2015 [29]. El Taeib 2013 [30]. Han 2015 [31]. Hata 2014 [35]. Noh 2014 [32]. Samochocki 2013 [33]. Sharma 2017 [25]. Su 2017 [34]. Wang 2014 [26].
Figure 4Meta-analysis of vitamin D intervention trials in atopic dermatitis: Comparison of clinical SCORAD index at baseline and post-vitamin D supplementation. References: Amestejani 2012 [39]. Di Filippo 2015 [29]. Javanbakht 2011 [40]. Samochocki 2013 [33]. Udompatailkul 2015 [36].