| Literature DB >> 33540476 |
Tobias Niedermaier1, Thomas Gredner1,2, Sabine Kuznia1,2, Ben Schöttker1,3, Ute Mons1,4, Hermann Brenner1,3,5,6.
Abstract
Recent meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have demonstrated significant reduction in cancer mortality by vitamin D supplementation. We estimated costs and savings for preventing cancer deaths by vitamin D supplementation of the population aged 50+ years in Germany. Our analysis is based on national data on cancer mortality in 2016. The number of preventable cancer deaths was estimated by multiplying cancer deaths above age 50 with the estimated proportionate reduction in cancer mortality derived by vitamin D supplementation according to meta-analyses of RCTs (13%). Saved costs were estimated by multiplying this number by estimated end-of-life cancer care costs (€40 000). Annual costs of vitamin D supplementation were estimated at 25€ per person above age 50. Comprehensive sensitivity analyses were conducted. In the main analysis, vitamin D supplementation was estimated to prevent almost 30 000 cancer deaths per year at approximate costs of €900 million and savings of €1.154 billion, suggesting net savings of €254 million. Our results support promotion of supplementation of vitamin D among older adults as a cost-saving approach to substantially reduce cancer mortality.Entities:
Keywords: cancer mortality; cost saving; prevention; supplementation; vitamin D
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33540476 PMCID: PMC8333776 DOI: 10.1002/1878-0261.12924
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Oncol ISSN: 1574-7891 Impact factor: 6.603
Recent meta‐analyses of RCTs of vitamin D supplementation and cancer mortality. NR, not reported.
| First author, year, reference | Databases searched | Literature searched until | Number of included studies (references) | Included participants | Cancer deaths | Statistical model for pooling | RR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Keum 2019 [ | PubMed, EMBASE | November 2018 | 5 [ | 75 241 | 1107 | Random effects | 0.87 (0.79–0.96) |
| Haykal 2019 [ | PubMed, EMBASE, CENTRAL | December 2018 | 5 [ | 31 163 | 1533 | Random effects | 0.87 (0.79–0.96) |
| Zhang X 2019 [ | PubMed, EMBASE | August 2018 | 7 [ | NR | 1763 | Random effects | 0.87 (0.79–0.95) |
Characteristics of the five studies included in the meta‐analysis of vitamin D supplementation and cancer mortality from Keum et al. [4]. 25(OH)D, 25‐hydroxyvitamin D; IQR, interquartile range; SD, standard deviation.
| First author, year (reference) | Country | Participants | % Women | Mean age (age range) [years] | Baseline 25(OH)D [nmol·L−1] | Supplementation dose | Duration of intervention [years] | Follow‐up [years] | RR (95% CI) for cancer mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trivedi 2003 [ | UK |
| 31.9 | 74.8 (65–85) | Not measured | 100 000 IU/4 months | 5 | 5 | 0.86 (0.61–1.20) |
| Wactawski‐Wende 2006 [ | USA |
| 100 | 50–79 |
Median (IQR) 42.4 (31.0–58.3) | 400 IU per day | Mean 7 | Mean 7 | 0.89 (0.77–1.03) |
| Avenell 2012 [ | UK |
| 84.7 | 77 (≥ 70) |
Mean 38 | 800 IU per day | 2–5 | 3 | 0.85 (0.68–1.06) |
| Scragg 2018 [ | New Zealand |
| 41.9 | 65.9 (50–84) |
Mean (SD) 66.3 (22.5) | 200 000 IU initial bolus + 100 000 IU per month |
Median (range) 3.3 (2.5–4.2) | Median 3.3 | 0.99 (0.60–1.64) |
| Manson 2019 [ | USA |
71% white, 20.2% black, 4% Hispanic | 50.6 | 67.1 (men ≥ 50, women ≥ 55) |
Median 71 | 2000 IU per day | 3–6 |
Median (range) 5.3 (3.8–6.1) | 0.83 (0.67–1.02) |
Estimates of prevented years of life lost (YLL) and associated costs and savings in the German population aged 50 years and older using different assumptions regarding vitamin D supplementation effects, doses, and savings of end‐of‐life cancer care costs. IU, international units; YLL, years of life lost.
| Scenario | Supplementation costs/person | End‐of‐life cancer care costs/cancer death | Cancer mortality reduction | Total costs per year (million €) | Total savings per year (million €) | Total net costs (million €) | Prevented cancer deaths | Prevented YLL | €/prevented YLL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | 25€ per year | 40 000€ | 13% | 900 | 1154 | −254 | 28 842 | 321 671 | Cost saving |
| Stronger effect | 25€ per year | 40 000€ | 21% | 900 | 1864 | −964 | 46 591 | 519 623 | Cost saving |
| Weaker effect | 25€ per year | 40 000€ | 4% | 900 | 355 | +545 | 8874 | 98 976 | 5506 |
| 400 IU per day | 10€ per year | 40 000€ | 11% | 360 | 976 | −616 | 24 405 | 272 184 | Cost saving |
| 2000 IU per day | 50€ per year | 40 000€ | 17% | 1800 | 1509 | +291 | 37 716 | 420 647 | 692 |
| Lower end‐of‐life cancer care costs | 25€ per year | 20 000€ | 13% | 900 | 577 | +323 | 28 842 | 321 671 | 1004 |
| Higher end‐of‐life cancer care costs | 25€ per year | 60 000€ | 13% | 900 | 1731 | −831 | 28 842 | 321 671 | Cost saving |
Observed mortality reduction found in individual trials (scenario ‘400 IU per day’, ‘2000 IU per day’) or in the meta‐analysis of Keum et al. (all other scenarios).
Lower bound of 95% CI of effect size for cancer mortality by vitamin D supplementation (RR = 0.79) instead of 0.87.
Upper bound of 95% CI of effect size for cancer mortality by vitamin D supplementation (RR = 0.96) instead of 0.87.
Assuming that this lower daily dose of vitamin D would result in a slightly smaller cancer mortality reduction of 11%, as observed in the study by Wactawski‐Wende et al. ([10], see Table 2)
Assuming that this higher daily dose of vitamin D would result in a stronger cancer mortality reduction by 17%, as observed in the study by Manson et al. ([13], see Table 2).
Estimates of costs of vitamin D supplementation per prevented year of life lost due to cancer (YLL) not considering any savings of end‐of‐life cancer care. IU, international units; YLL, years of life lost.
| Scenario | Supplementation costs/person | Cancer mortality reduction | Total costs per year (million €) | Prevented cancer deaths | Prevented YLL | €/prevented YLL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Base case | 25€ per year | 13% | 900 | 28 842 | 321 671 | 2798 |
| Stronger effect | 25€ per year | 21% | 900 | 46 591 | 519 623 | 1732 |
| Weaker effect | 25€ per year | 4% | 900 | 8874 | 98 976 | 9093 |
| 400 IU per day | 10€ per year | 11% | 360 | 24 405 | 272 184 | 1323 |
| 2000 IU per day | 50€ per year | 17% | 1800 | 37 716 | 420 647 | 4279 |
Observed mortality reduction found in individual trials (scenario ‘400 IU per day’, ‘2000 IU per day’) or in the meta‐analysis of Keum et al. (all other scenarios).
Lower bound of 95% CI of effect size for cancer mortality by vitamin D supplementation (RR = 0.79) instead of 0.87.
Upper bound of 95% CI of effect size for cancer mortality by vitamin D supplementation (RR = 0.96) instead of 0.87.
Assuming that this lower daily dose of vitamin D would result in a slightly smaller cancer mortality reduction of 11%, as observed in the study by Wactawski‐Wende et al. ([10], see Table 2).
Assuming that this higher daily dose of vitamin D would result in a stronger cancer mortality reduction by 17%, as observed in the study by Manson et al. ([13], see Table 2).