| Literature DB >> 33921297 |
Salvatore Corrao1,2, Raffaella Mallaci Bocchio2, Marika Lo Monaco2, Giuseppe Natoli2, Attilio Cavezzi3, Emidio Troiani4, Christiano Argano2.
Abstract
More than one year has passed since the first cases of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-CoV-2 coronavirus were reported in Wuhan (China), rapidly evolving into a global pandemic. This infectious disease has become a major public health challenge in the world. Unfortunately, to date, no specific antivirals have been proven to be effective against COVID-19, and although a few vaccines are available, the mortality rate is not decreasing but is still increasing. One therapeutic strategy has been focused on infection prevention and control measures. In this regard, the use of nutraceutical supports may play a role against some aspect of the infection, particularly the inflammatory state and the immune system function of patients, thus representing a strategy to control the worst outcomes of this pandemic. For this reason, we performed an overview including meta-analyses and systematic reviews to assess the association among melatonin, vitamin C, vitamin D, zinc supplementation and inflammatory markers using three databases, namely, MEDLINE, PubMed Central and the Cochrane Library of Systematic Reviews. According to the evidence available, an intake of 50,000 IU/month of vitamin D showed efficacy in CRP. An amount of 1 to 2 g per day of vitamin C demonstrated efficacy both in CRP and endothelial function, and a dosage of melatonin ranging from 5 to 25 mg /day showed good evidence of efficacy in CRP, TNF and IL6. A dose of 50 mg/day of elemental zinc supplementation showed positive results in CRP. Based on the data reported in this review, the public health system could consider whether it is possible to supplement the current limited preventive measures through targeted nutraceutical large-scale administration.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; inflammation; melatonin; nutraceuticals; overview; systematic review; vitamin C; vitamin D; zinc
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33921297 PMCID: PMC8069903 DOI: 10.3390/nu13041261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Flow diagram of the study selection process.
Figure 2A Measurement Tool to Checklist Assess Systematic Reviews (AMSTAR) assessment for each systematic review, sorted by year of publication. Colors are referred to scores: green is referred to “high scores” (8–11 points) and yellow to “moderate” (4–7 points). No systematic review had a “low” (<3 points) evaluation.
Vitamin D: characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Study | Omid Asbaghia (2019) [ | Sheila A. FisherID (2019) [ | Mingming Wanga (2019) [ | Yanting Yu (2018) [ | Mohsen Mazidi (2018) [ | EK Calton (2018) [ | Tari Agbalalah (2017) [ | Małgorzata Jamka (2015) [ | Neng Chen (2014) [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| PubMed, Scopus, ISI Web of Science and Google Scholar | Central, Medline, ENBASE, PubMed and Web of Science | PubMed, EMBASE, and Cochrane Library | PubMed and the Cochrane Library | PubMed-Medline, SCOPUS, Google Scholar and Web of Science | SCOPUS and PubMed | Cochrane, PubMed and Medline | PubMed, Scopus, the Cochrane Library and EMBASE | PubMed, Web of Science, and Cochrane library |
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| 8 | 8 | 14 | 13 | 24 | 9 | 29 | 13 | 10 |
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| Healthy subjects and patients with colorectal adenoma, type 2 diabetes mellitus, pregnancy, pregnancy with gestational diabetes and polycystic ovary syndrome | Patients with type1 diabetes, Addison’s disease, multiple sclerosis, asthma and healthy subjects | Patients with asthma | Patients with type 2 diabetes | Patients with obesity, type 2 diabetic, HIV-infected, non-diabetic chronic kidney disease chronic fatigue syndrome, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and healthy pregnant. | Patients ≥ 60 years, overweight and obese, prediabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, myocardial infarction, isolated systolic hypertension, postmenopausal women. | Patients with type 2 and gestational diabetes mellitus/prediabetic, cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease and overweight/obese participants | Obese and overweight subjects | Healthy subjects and patients with type 2 diabetes, polycystic ovary syndrome women, obese adults, coronary artery disease patients |
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500 mg/d Ca citrate + 200 IU/day vit D 1000 mg/d Ca citrate + 50,000 IU/day vit D |
650 IU/day vit D 2000 IU/day vit D 4000 IU/day vit D 14,000 IU/day vit D 4000 IU/monthly vit D 140,000 IU/monthly vit D | 500 UI/day vit D |
200 IU/day vit D 6.000 IU/day vit D 25.000 IU/day vit D 50.000 IU/week vit D | 400 IU/day to 11200 IU/day vit D | 200 IU/day to 11200 IU/day vit D | 4000 IU/weeks vit D | 1000 IU/day to 7000 IU/day vit D | 400 IU/day to 7000 IU/day vit D |
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| 6 weeks–3 years | 3–12 months | 1,5–12 months | 8–52 weeks | 4 weeks–12 months | 12–52 weeks | 8–52 weeks | 4–52 weeks | 9–48 weeks |
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| The effect of vitamin D–calcium co-supplementation on inflammatory biomarkers in adults | The effect of vitamin D supplementation in enhancing absolute T regulatory cells (Treg) numbers in patients with inflammatory or autoimmune disease. | To assess the correlations of vitamin D status with asthma- related respiratory outcomes. | To examine whether or not the supplementation of vitamin D exhibits anti-inflammatory benefits in T2DM subjects | To evaluate the effect of vitamin D supplementation on C-reactive protein (CRP) | Causal links between vitamin D status [25(OH)D] and systemic inflammation | The effects of vitamin D supplementation on endothelial function and inflammation in adults | The effect of supplementation with vitamin D on selected inflammatory biomarkers in overweight and obese subjects. | To evaluate the association of vitamin D supplementation with circulating hs-CRP levels. |
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| A significant reducing effect of vitamin D–calcium co-supplementation on serum CRP concentrations in comparison with placebo. No significant effect of joint calcium and supplementation with vitamin D on serum concentrations of IL-6 (WMD: −1.45, 95% CI: −5.31, 2.41 pg/mL, | Planned meta-analysis was not possible due to the heterogeneous nature of the studies. Nevertheless, in a trial of autoimmune disorders which measured the proportion of Tregs, a significant difference was reported, with a higher percentage of Tregs observed in the vitamin D group (at 12 weeks, mean 6.4% (SD 0.8%) (vitamin D) vs. 5.5% (1.0%) (placebo). | Vitamin D supplementation was associated with a protective effect of exacerbation in patients with vitamin D insufficiency (vitamin D < 30 ng/mL) (RR: 0.76 95%Cl (0.61–0.95)). It was also demonstrated an improvement of their FEV1% (FEV1% < 80%) (MD: 8.3 95%Cl (5.95–10.64). | Vitamin D supplementation significantly decreased the circulating hs-CRP concentration (standard mean differences, −0.45 [95% CI −0.77 to −0.14], | The results indicated that the vitamin D supplementation significant decreased the hs-CRP level by 0.45 μg/mL, whereas the vitamin D supplementation did not influence the TNF-α and IL-6. | There was no effect on the weighted mean difference (WMD) of IL-6 [(WMD (95% confidence interval) = 0.1, (−0.166, 0.366) pg/mL, | No significant change in both endothelial and inflammatory markers ( | Vitamin D supplementation did not influence on CRP (std. mean differences −0.11; 95% CI −0.27–0.04; | Vitamin D supplementation significantly decreased the circulating hs-CRP level by 1.08 mg/L (95% CI, −2.13, −0.03), with the evidence of heterogeneity. Subgroup analysis suggested a higher reduction of 2.21 mg/L (95% CI, −3.50, −0.92) among participants with baseline hs-CRP level ≥5 mg/L. |
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| Vitamin D–calcium co-supplementation has beneficial effect on serum CRP concentrations. A beneficial effect was not seen for IL-6 and TNF-α concentrations. | Vitamin D supplementation may increase Treg/CD3 ratios in both healthy individuals and patients with autoimmune disorders and may increase Treg function. | Vitamin D supplementation reduced the rate of asthma exacerbation, especially in patients with vitamin D insufficiency. | In T2DM subjects, vitamin D supplementation is beneficial for the reduction in hs-CRP but does not have a significant influence on TNF-α and IL-6. | Vitamin D supplementation had no impact on serum CRP, IL10, and TNF-α, while significantly increased serum IL6. | Available high-quality RCTs did not support a beneficial effect of cholecalciferol on systemic IL-6 and CRP. | The use of vitamin D supplementation as a therapeutic or preventative measure for CVD is not supported by evidence. | Supplementation with vitamin D does not have a significant influence on changes in the concentration of selected inflammatory biomarkers in the obese and overweight subjects. | Vitamin D supplementation is beneficial for the reduction in circulating hs-CRP. |
* Author’s conclusions are reported.
Vitamin D: summary of the principal characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Pharmaceutical Drug | Dose | Follow-Up | Efficacy Yes | Efficacy No | Study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D1 e D2 | Paricalcitol | 400 IU day | 3 months | CRP | Mohsen Mazidi (2018) [ | |
| Ergocalciferol | 50.000 IU/ month | 12 weeks–6 months | CRP | Mohsen Mazidi (2018) [ | ||
| Vitamin D3 | Cholecalciferol | 200–6.000 IU/day | 8–52 weeks | CRP | TNF-α e IL6 | Yanting Yu (2018) [ |
| 400 IU/day–11,200 IU/day | 4 weeks–12 months | IL6 | CRP, IL10 e TNF-α | Mohsen Mazidi (2018) [ | ||
| 4000 IU/week | 8 weeks | FMD *, CRP, IL-6 e TNF-α | Tari Agbalalah (2017) [ | |||
| 4000 IU/day | 24 weeks | hs-CRP ** | Neng Chen (2014) [ | |||
| ≤4000 IU/day | >12 weeks | CRP | TNF-α e IL6 | Yanting Yu (2018) [ | ||
* FMD = flow-mediated dilation (endothelial function parameters). ** hs-CRP = circulating high-sensitivity C-reactive protein.
Vitamin C: characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Scheme 2019. | Maryam Safabakhsh (2019) [ | Sedagh Jafamejad (2018) [ | Ammar W. Ashor (2015) [ | Ammar W. Ashor (2014) [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| PubMed, Scopus, ISI Web of Science e Google Scholar | Scopus, Cochrane Library, PubMed and Google Scholar | MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Library and Scopus | Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library, and Scopus |
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| 11 | 12 | 46 | 44 |
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| Diabetic subjects/Nonsmokers | Patients with chronic diseases | Adult participants >18 years | Adult participants |
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| 500 mg/day | 250 mg/day–1 g/day | 500–2000 mg/day | 500 mg/day–1 g/day |
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| 1 day–8 weeks | 4–24 weeks | 4–52 weeks | 1 day–8 weeks |
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| The effect of vitamin C on reducing CRP or hs-CRP level. | The effects of supplementation with vitamin C on serum C-reactive Protein (CRP) levels. | The effects of antioxidant vitamins C and E supplementation on endothelial function. | The effect of supplementation with vitamin C on endothelial function. |
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| Vitamin C could decrease CRP levels relative to placebo group | Supplementation with vitamin C significantly lowered CRP among trials. | Significant improvements in endothelial function were observed in trials supplementing with vitamin C (500–2000 mg/d) (SMD: 0·25, 95% CI 0·02, 0·49, P¼0·043) | A beneficial effect of vitamin C on endothelial function was found (SMD: 0.50, 95% CI: 0.34, 0.66, |
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| Vitamin C supplementation might have a significant effect only on CRP reduction. | Vitamin C supplementation reduces serum CRP levels. | Supplementation with vitamin C improves endothelial function. | Supplementation with vitamin C improved endothelial function. |
Vitamin C: summary of the principal characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Administration | Dose | Follow-Up | Endpoint | Efficacy | Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intravenous | 250 mg/day | 8 weeks | CPR | Yes | Biniaz 2014 [ |
| 300 mg/day | 24 weeks | CPR | Yes | Attallah 2006 [ | |
| Oral | 1 g/day | 10 days | EF * | Yes | De Marchi 2012 [ |
| 1 g/day | 4 days | CRP | Yes | Colby 2011 [ | |
| 1 g/day | 4 weeks | CRP | Yes | Modi 2014 [ | |
| 2 g/day | 4 weeks | EF * | Yes | Antoniades 2004 [ |
* Endothelial function (EF) measured by either forearm blood flow (FBF) or flow mediated dilation (FMD).
Melatonin: characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Zarezadeh M (2019) [ | Akbari M (2018) [ | |
|---|---|---|
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| SCOPUS, PubMed, Cochrane Library, Embase, Google Scholar | Cochrane Library, EMBASE, PubMed, and Web of Science |
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| 13 | 6 |
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| Patients with chronic diseases | Patients with metabolic syndrome |
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| 3 to 25 mg/day | 6 to 10 mg/day |
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| From 4 to 60 weeks | From 4 weeks to 14 months |
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| To evaluate the effect of supplementation with melatonin on inflammatory biomarker levels | To evaluate the effect of supplementation with melatonin on inflammatory markers among subjects with MetS or related disorders. |
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| Melatonin supplementation significantly decreased TNF-α and IL-6 levels [(WMD = −2.24 pg/mL; 95% CI −3.45, −1.03; | Melatonin supplementation significantly reduced C-reactive protein (SMD = −1.80; 95% CI −3.27, −0.32; |
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| Melatonin supplementation significantly reduced TNF-α and IL-6 levels. | The promising effect of melatonin administration on reducing CRP and IL-6 among patients with metabolic syndrome and related disorders. |
Melatonin: summary of the principal characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Administration | Dose | Follow-Up | Endpoint | Efficacy | Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral | 25 mg/day | 26 weeks | TNF and IL-6 | Yes | SanchezLopez A (2018) [ |
| 20 mg/day | 12 weeks | TNF | Yes | Lissoni P (1996) [ | |
| 10 mg/day | 12 weeks | CPR | Yes | Raygan et al. (2017) [ | |
| 26 weeks | TNF and IL-6 | Yes | Forest CM (2007) [ | ||
| 6 mg/day | 6 weeks | TNF and IL-6 | Yes | Mesri Alamdari (2015) [ | |
| 5 mg/day | 52 weeks | CPR | Yes | Chojnacki C (2011) [ |
Zinc: characteristics of the included systematic reviews.
| Mousavi SM (2018) [ | |
|---|---|
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| PubMed, SCOPUS, and Google Scholar |
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| 8 |
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| Hemodialysis patients |
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| 50 mg/day |
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| 6–25 weeks |
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| Effect of supplementation with zinc on plasma |
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| The results of the meta-analysis displayed a significant reduction in circulating CRP levels (WMD: −1.68 mg/L; 95% CI: −2.4 to −0.9, |
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| Supplementation with zinc markedly reduced plasma CRP concentration |
Dose finding according to single trial results for zinc.
| Administration | Dose | Follow-Up | Endpoint | Efficacy | Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oral | 50 mg/day elemental zinc | 6 weeks | CPR | Yes | Rashidi (2009) [ |