Role of vitamin D deficiency in extraskeletal complications : predictor of health outcome or marker of health status?


Autoria(s): Guessous I.
Data(s)

2015

Resumo

The relationship of vitamin D with extraskeletal complications, such as cardiovascular disease, cancer, and autoimmune disease, is of major interest considering its roles in key biological processes and the worldwide high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency. However, the causal relationships between vitamin D and most extraskeletal complications are weak. Currently, a heated debate over vitamin D is being conducted according to two hypotheses. In this review, we first present the different arguments that suggest a major role of vitamin D in a very broad type of extraskeletal complications (hypothesis #1). We then present results from recent meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials indicating a lack of association of vitamin D with major extraskeletal complications (hypothesis #2). We discuss different issues (e.g., causality, confounding, reverse causation, misclassification, and Mendelian randomization) that contribute to the favoring of one hypothesis over the other. While ultimately only one hypothesis is correct, we anticipate that the results from the ongoing randomized controlled trials will be unlikely to reconcile the divided experts.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_54D26B6BBB0D

isbn:2314-6133

pmid:26075246

doi:10.1155/2015/563403

isiid:000354669400001

http://my.unil.ch/serval/document/BIB_54D26B6BBB0D.pdf

http://nbn-resolving.org/urn/resolver.pl?urn=urn:nbn:ch:serval-BIB_54D26B6BBB0D8

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Biomed Research International, vol. 2015, pp. 563403

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article