Study finds more than half of patients with low vitamin D do not receive supplements.
Patients with low vitamin D levels who are hospitalized for COVID-19 may have a lower risk of dying or requiring mechanical ventilation if they receive vitamin D supplementation of at least 1,000 units weekly, according to a study presented virtually at ENDO 2021.
“Given how common vitamin D deficiency is in the world and the U.S., we believe that this research is highly relevant right now,” says co-author Sweta Chekuri, MD, of Montefiore Health System and Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, N.Y.
Research has shown that vitamin D supplementation can prevent inflammation in other respiratory diseases, but there have been limited studies examining the role of vitamin D supplementation in COVID-19. The purpose of the study was to determine whether being supplemented with vitamin D before being admitted to the hospital with COVID-19 resulted in less severe COVID-19 disease in patients with a low vitamin D level.
The researchers studied 124 adult patients with low vitamin D that was measured up to 90 days before their admission for COVID-19. They compared the patients who were supplemented with at least 1,000 units of vitamin D weekly to those who had not received vitamin D supplements in terms of whether they were mechanically ventilated or died during admission.
“We hope this research will encourage clinicians to discuss adding this supplement with their patients who have low vitamin D, as this may reduce the odds of people developing severe COVID-19.”
They found that patients who were supplemented were less likely to be mechanically ventilated or to die following admission, though the finding wasn’t statistically significant (37.5% of patients who were not supplemented vs. 33.3% of those who were). They also found that more than half of those who should have been supplemented were not.
“Though we weren’t able to show a definitive link to severe COVID-19, it is clear that patients with low vitamin D should receive supplementation not only for bone health, but also for stronger protection against severe COVID-19,” said co-author Corinne Levitus, DO, of Montefiore Health System and Albert Einstein College of Medicine. “We hope this research will encourage clinicians to discuss adding this supplement with their patients who have low vitamin D, as this may reduce the odds of people developing severe COVID-19.”
A study published in the Endocrine Society’s Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism last fall found over 80% of 200 COVID-19 patients in a hospital in Spain had vitamin D deficiency.