Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail?
Our knowledge of vitamin D has come a long way since the 100 years it took for doctors to accept, between 1860 and 1890, that both sunlight and cod liver oil (a well-known folk remedy) cured and prevented rickets. Vitamins D2/D3 were discovered exactly a hundred years ago, and over the last 50 years...
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Bioscientifica
2020-09-01
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doaj-1151dc8d383a4f57a16c356b5b2f6e002020-11-25T03:06:07ZengBioscientificaEndocrine Connections2049-36142049-36142020-09-0199R195R206https://doi.org/10.1530/EC-20-0274Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail?Barbara J Boucher0Blizard Institute, Barts & The London school of Medicine & Dentistry, Queen Mary University of London, London, UKOur knowledge of vitamin D has come a long way since the 100 years it took for doctors to accept, between 1860 and 1890, that both sunlight and cod liver oil (a well-known folk remedy) cured and prevented rickets. Vitamins D2/D3 were discovered exactly a hundred years ago, and over the last 50 years vitamin D has been found to have many effects on virtually all human tissues and not just on bone health, while mechanisms affecting the actions of vitamin D at the cellular level are increasingly und erstood, but deficiency persists globally. Observational studies in humans have shown that better provision of vitamin D is strongly associated, dose-wise, with reductions in current and future health risks in line with the known actions of vitamin D. Randomised controlled trials, commonly accepted as providing a ‘gold standard’ for assessing the efficacy of new forms of treatment, have frequently failed to provide supportive evidence for the expected health benefits of supplementation. Such RCTs, however, have use d designs evolved for testing drugs while vitamin D is a nutrient; the appreciation o f this difference is critical to identifying health benefits from existing RCT data and for impro ving future RCT design. This report aims, therefore, to provide a brief overview of the evidence for a range of non-bony health benefits of vitamin D repletion; to discuss spec ific aspects of vitamin D biology that can confound RCT design and how to allow for them.https://ec.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/ec/9/9/EC-20-0274.xmlvitamin dtrialsconfoundingnutritionhealth outcomesnon-bony |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Barbara J Boucher |
spellingShingle |
Barbara J Boucher Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail? Endocrine Connections vitamin d trials confounding nutrition health outcomes non-bony |
author_facet |
Barbara J Boucher |
author_sort |
Barbara J Boucher |
title |
Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail? |
title_short |
Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail? |
title_full |
Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail? |
title_fullStr |
Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Why do so many trials of vitamin D supplementation fail? |
title_sort |
why do so many trials of vitamin d supplementation fail? |
publisher |
Bioscientifica |
series |
Endocrine Connections |
issn |
2049-3614 2049-3614 |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
Our knowledge of vitamin D has come a long way since the 100 years it took for doctors to accept, between 1860 and 1890, that both sunlight and cod liver oil (a well-known folk remedy) cured and prevented rickets. Vitamins D2/D3 were discovered exactly a hundred years ago, and over the last 50 years vitamin D has been found to have many effects on virtually all human tissues and not just on bone health, while mechanisms affecting the actions of vitamin D at the cellular level are increasingly und erstood, but deficiency persists globally. Observational studies in humans have shown that better provision of vitamin D is strongly associated, dose-wise, with reductions in current and future health risks in line with the known actions of vitamin D. Randomised controlled trials, commonly accepted as providing a ‘gold standard’ for assessing the efficacy of new forms of treatment, have frequently failed to provide supportive evidence for the expected health benefits of supplementation. Such RCTs, however, have use d designs evolved for testing drugs while vitamin D is a nutrient; the appreciation o f this difference is critical to identifying health benefits from existing RCT data and for impro ving future RCT design. This report aims, therefore, to provide a brief overview of the evidence for a range of non-bony health benefits of vitamin D repletion; to discuss spec ific aspects of vitamin D biology that can confound RCT design and how to allow for them. |
topic |
vitamin d trials confounding nutrition health outcomes non-bony |
url |
https://ec.bioscientifica.com/view/journals/ec/9/9/EC-20-0274.xml |
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