Nutrients (Mar 2024)

The Association of Vitamin D Receptor Polymorphisms with COVID-19 Severity

  • Nikolaos Tentolouris,
  • Charoula Achilla,
  • Ioanna A. Anastasiou,
  • Ioanna Eleftheriadou,
  • Anastasios Tentolouris,
  • Dimitrios Basoulis,
  • Ourania Kosta,
  • Alexandros Lambropoulos,
  • Maria P. Yavropoulou,
  • Anthoula Chatzikyriakidou,
  • Edward B. Jude

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16050727
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 5
p. 727

Abstract

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Background: Association studies of vitamin D receptor (VDR) polymorphisms with COVID-19 severity have produced inconsistent results in different populations. Herein we examined VDR gene polymorphisms in a Caucasian Greek cohort of COVID-19 patients. Methods: This was a case-control study in a tertiary university hospital in Greece including 137 COVID-19 patients with varying disease severities and 72 healthy individuals. In total 209 individuals were genotyped for the FokI (rs10735810), ApaI (rs7975232), TaqI (rs731236) and BsmI (rs1544410) single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) of the VDR gene by polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis (PCR-RFLPs). Statistical analyses were performed to determine the association between genotype and disease severity, adjusting for various confounding factors. Results: Genotype distribution of the studied VDR SNPs in the control group was in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium. The TaqI variant was differentially distributed between controls and COVID-19 patients according to the additive model (p = 0.009), and the CC genotype was significantly associated with an increased risk for severe COVID-19 according to the recessive model [OR: 2.52, 95%CI:1.2–5.29, p = 0.01]. Multivariate analysis demonstrated a robust association of COVID-19 severity and TaqI polymorphism in the recessive model even after adjusting for multiple confounders, including age, sex and CRP levels [Adj.OR:3.23, 95%CI:1.17–8.86, p = 0.023]. The distribution of FokI, ApaI and BsmI genotypes was similar between COVID-19 patients and controls. Conclusions: The CC genotype of TaqI polymorphism is significantly associated with an increased risk for severe COVID-19 independently of age, sex or degree of inflammation.

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