4.7 Letter

Vitamin D deficiency aggravates COVID-19: discussion of the evidence

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION
Volume 63, Issue 4, Pages 563-567

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2021.1951653

Keywords

Vitamin D; COVID-19; SarCov-2; meta-analysis

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This article discusses the association between vitamin D deficiency and COVID-19, providing updated statistics. The study found that individuals with vitamin D deficiency had a higher chance of hospitalization and there was a certain relationship between vitamin D deficiency and mortality in COVID-19 patients. Vitamin D is associated with the severity of COVID-19.
We discuss the quality of the article evidence on the association between vitamin D deficiency and COVID-19, as well as updating the statistics in response to the letter to the editor regarding the same paper. Our review included 22 studies with data available in 23 articles. Using crude OR data, we observed that the chance of hospitalization was 2.16 (CI 95% = 1.42 - 2.89;) for vitamin-deficient individuals compared to non-deficient ones. However, when using the adjusted OR, it was possible to obtain a chance of 1.78 (CI 95% = 1.36-2.20). For the outcome vitamin D deficiency and death in patients with COVID-19 infection the crude association value was 1.38 (OR =1.38; CI 95% = 1.08 - 1.68) and the adjusted OR with the two studies was 1.08 (CI 95% = 0.82- 1.34). This new analyzes don't substantially alter our results. Vitamin D remains associated with severity COVID-19.

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