| Literature DB >> 35054296 |
Giulia Bivona1, Caterina Maria Gambino1, Bruna Lo Sasso1, Concetta Scazzone1, Rosaria Vincenza Giglio1, Luisa Agnello1, Marcello Ciaccio1,2.
Abstract
Vitamin D is a steroid hormone regulating calcium-phosphorus homeostasis, immune response and brain function. In the past thirty years, an increasing number of cohort studies, meta-analyses and randomized controlled trials (RTCs) evaluated the serum levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D], which is considered the Vitamin D status biomarker, in patients affected by neurological, psychiatric and autoimmune diseases. Although an association between low 25(OH)D serum levels and the prevalence of these diseases has been found, it is still unclear whether the serum 25(OH)D measurement can be clinically useful as a biomarker for diagnosis, prognosis and predicting treatment response in neurodegeneration, mental illness and immune-mediated disorders. The lack of standardized data, as well as discrepancies among the studies (in the analytical methods, cut-offs, endpoints and study sets), weakened the findings achieved, hindered pooling data, and, consequently, hampered drawing conclusions. This narrative review summarizes the main findings from the studies performed on serum 25(OH)D in neurological, psychiatric and autoimmune diseases, and clarifies whether or not serum 25(OH)D can be used as a reliable biomarker in these diseases.Entities:
Keywords: 25(OH)D; Alzheimer’s disease; autoimmune diseases; biomarker; multiple sclerosis; neurodegenerative diseases; psychiatric diseases; standardization; vitamin D
Year: 2022 PMID: 35054296 PMCID: PMC8774449 DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics12010130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagnostics (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4418
Figure 1Vitamin D metabolism pathway. Vitamin D active form is produced in a multi-step process, including the ultraviolet B (UVB) rays’ irradiation of a cutaneous precursor [7-dehydro-cholesterol (7-DHC)], and two hydroxylation steps. In addition to the synthesis of Vitamin D, 7-DHC can be oriented toward the production of cholesterol by Kandutsch–Russell biochemical pathway.
Figure 2Vitamin D biological functions. Vitamin D’s active form, also known as calcitriol, exerts pleiotropic functions on different cells and organs.
Major findings from the observational studies evaluating Vitamin D serum levels in autoimmune diseases.
| Disease | Authors | Ref | Publication Time | Sample Size | Cut-Off Value for Vitamin D | Ethnic/Cultural/Geographical Features | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SLE | |||||||
| Petri et al. | [ | 2013 | 1006 | 40 ng/mL | Caucasian (54%), African—American (37%), other (8%) | 25(OH)D levels of 40 ng/mL or above are not associated with improvement in disease activity | |
| AlSaleem et al. | [ | 2015 | 28 | Normal ≥30–100 ng/mL, | Saudi | High daily Vitamin D3 supplementation could impact disease activity | |
| Eloi et al. | [ | 2017 | 199 | Insufficient 10–30 ng/mL, | Brazilian | Disease activity is associated with lower serum concentrations of 25(OH)D | |
| Salman-Monte et al. | [ | 2016 | 102 | NA | Spanish | Vitamin D insufficiency is highly prevalent among female SLE patients, even in southern regions | |
| Andreoli et al. | [ | 2012 | 115 | Insufficient 10–30 ng/mL, | Italian | Patients with antiphospholipid syndrome have low 25(OH)D levels | |
| Aranow et al. | [ | 2015 | 125 | 20 ng/mL | NA | Vitamin D3 supplementation does not diminish the expression of IFNα inducible genes | |
| Dall’Ara et al. | [ | 2018 | NA | NA | NA | Vitamin D insufficiency is endemic in SLE patients | |
| SSc | |||||||
| Lin et al. | [ | 2017 | 554 | Insufficient 10–30 ng/mL, | NA | SSc patients exhibit low Vitamin D levels. The severity of clinical features is not associated with the extent of Vitamin D deficit | |
| Gupta et al. | [ | 2018 | 38 | Normal 30–100 ng/mL, | NA | Geographic origin or clinical presentation of SSc patients does not influence 25(OH)D levels | |
| RA | |||||||
| Polasik et al. | [ | 2017 | 35 | 20 ng/mL | Polish | 25(OH)D levels were similar in RA patients and age- and gender-matched healthy controls and were not associated with joint damage and disease activity in patients | |
| Wong et al. | [ | 2017 | 77 | 20 ng/mL | Malaysian | Mean 25(OH)D levels in RA patients were low, but similar to the age-matched healthy controls | |
| Kerr et al. | [ | 2011 | 850 | Insufficient <30 ng/mL, | Caucasian males | 25-OH-D insufficiency is associated with disease severity, not clinical disease activity | |
| Pakchotanon et al. | [ | 2016 | 239 | Normal >30 ng/mL, | Thai | No associations between serum 25(OH)D levels and disease activity or functional status | |
| Gopal et al. | [ | 2019 | 100 | 50 nmol/L | Malaysian | 25(OH)D is not associated with disease activity or serum IL-6 levels but it may have a role in functional disability | |
| Lin et al. | [ | 2016 | 3489 | NA | NA | Serum Vitamin D levels are lower in RA patients and are inversely associated with disease activity | |
| Autoimmune Thyroiditis | |||||||
| Wang et al. | [ | 2015 | 1782 | 20 ng/mL | NA | Low levels of serum 25(OH)D are related to autoimmune thyroiditis | |
| Muscogiuri et al. | [ | 2016 | 50 | 50 nmol/L | Italian | Low levels of 25(OH)D were significantly associated with | |
| Muscogiuri et al. | [ | 2016 | 168 | Normal ≥20 ng/mL, | Italian | Vitamin D deficiency was significantly associated with autoimmune thyroiditis in the elderly | |
| D’Aurizio et al. | [ | 2015 | NA | NA | NA | Conflicting results have been obtained about the association between Vitamin D and autoimmune thyroiditis | |
| Effraimidis et al. | [ | 2012 | 78 | Insufficient <30 ng/mL, | Caucasian | Vitamin D deficiency is not related to early stages of autoimmune thyroiditis | |
| Botelho et al. | [ | 2018 | 159 | 30 ng/dL | NA | Lower levels of Vitamin D have not been associated with autoimmune thyroiditis | |
| MS | |||||||
| Munger et al. | [ | 2006 | 515 | 25 nmol/L | White American, | High circulating levels of Vitamin D are associated with a lower risk of MS | |
| Munger et al. | [ | 2017 | 1092 | Normal >50 nmol/L, | Finnish females | Vitamin D deficiency is a risk factor for MS | |
| Nielsen et al. | [ | 2017 | 521 | 30 nmol/L | Danish | Low concentrations of neonatal Vitamin D are associated with an increased risk of MS | |
| Ascherio et al. | [ | 2014 | 468 | 50 nmol/L | NA | Higher serum 25(OH)D levels robustly predicted a lower degree of MS activity, brain atrophy and clinical progression over the 5 years of follow-up | |
| Salzer et al. | [ | 2012 | 192 | 75 nmol/L | NA | Association between high 25(OH)D levels during the years preceding disease onset and a decreased risk of MS | |
NA, not applicable.
Major findings from the observational studies evaluating Vitamin D serum levels in psychiatric disorders.
| Disease | Authors | Ref | Publication Time | Sample Size | Cut-Off Value for Vitamin D | Ethnic/Cultural/Geographical Features | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Lee et al. | [ | 2011 | 3369 | Sufficient >75 nmol/L | Caucasian | An inverse association between 25(OH)D levels and depression, largely independent of several lifestyle and health factors | |
| Kjaergaard et al. | [ | 2012 | 357 | NA | Norway | Low levels of serum 25(OH)D were associated with depressive | |
| Milaneschi et al. | [ | 2014 | 2386 | Optimal >50 nmol/L | Netherlands | Low levels of 25(OH)D were associated with | |
| Song et al. | [ | 2016 | 2853 | NA | Korea | Lower concentrations of Vitamin D are independently associated with depressive symptoms | |
| Sherchand et al. | [ | 2018 | 300 | Insufficient 20–29 ng/mL | Nepal | Vitamin D deficient people have increased odds of having clinically significant depression | |
| Vidgren et al. 2018 | [ | 2018 | 1602 | NA | Finland | Lower concentration of serum 25(OH)D is associated with a higher prevalence of depression in an elderly general population | |
| Zhao et al. | [ | 2010 | 3916 | NA | USA | No association between serum concentrations of 25(OH)D and the presence of moderate-to-severe depression, major depression or minor depression | |
| Kwasky et al. | [ | 2014 | 77 | NA | USA | No association between Vitamin D and depression | |
| Can et al. | [ | 2017 | 175 | NA | Turkey | No relationship between depression, Vitamin D levels and Fok 1 polymorphism of Vitamin D receptor. | |
| Bossola et al. | [ | 2010 | 80 | NA | Italy | No association between Vitamin D and symptoms of depression as well as anxiety in chronic hemodialysis patients | |
| Almeida et al. | [ | 2015 | 3105 | <50 nmol/L | Australia | The results do not support a role for Vitamin D in the causation of depression | |
|
| |||||||
| Berg et al. | [ | 2010 | 1179 | Insufficient/deficient < 50 nmol/L | Norway and immigrants | 25-hydroxyvitamin D deficiency is common in patients with psychotic disorders | |
| Crews et al. | [ | 2013 | 69 | Insufficient 25–50 nmol/L | England | Vitamin D levels are low at the onset of a first psychotic episode | |
| Firth et al. | [ | 2018 | 2612 | NA | Spain, Turkey, India, Poland, China, UK, USA, Pakistan, Singapore, Nigeria, Romania, Norway | Deficits in Vitamin D previously observed in long-term schizophrenia appear to exist from illness onset, and are associated with worse symptomology | |
| Norelli et al. | [ | 2010 | 60 | Deficient <20 ng/mL | USA | High prevalence rates of Vitamin D deficiency in the general population, including patients with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders regardless of acute care or long-stay inpatient status. | |
| Zhu et al. | [ | 2020 | 12,528 | NA | Africa, America, Caucasian, Japan, Germany, Spain, Turkey, Pakistan | Vitamin D deficiency is associated with schizophrenia | |
NA, not available.