Nutrients (Aug 2022)

Vitamin D Status and Mortality from SARS CoV-2: A Prospective Study of Unvaccinated Caucasian Adults

  • Robert Barrett,
  • Modar Youssef,
  • Irfan Shah,
  • Julia Ioana,
  • Abdullah Al Lawati,
  • Abdullah Bukhari,
  • Suzanne Hegarty,
  • Liam J. Cormican,
  • Eoin Judge,
  • Conor M. Burke,
  • Catriona Cody,
  • Joseph Feely,
  • Katrina Hutchinson,
  • William Tormey,
  • Eoghan O’ Neill,
  • Aoife O’ Shea,
  • Meabh Connolly,
  • Daniel M. A. McCartney,
  • John L. Faul

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14163252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 16
p. 3252

Abstract

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COVID-19 and a low vitamin D state share common risk factors, which might explain why vitamin D deficiency has been linked with higher COVID-19 mortality. Moreover, measures of serum vitamin D may become lower during systemic inflammatory responses, further confounding the association via reverse causality. In this prospective study (recruited over 12 months), we examined whether the association between a low vitamin D state and in-hospital mortality due to SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia in unvaccinated subjects is explained by (i) the presence of shared risk factors (e.g., obesity, advanced age) or (ii) a reduction in serum 25(OH)D due to COVID-19 (i.e., reverse causality). In this cohort of 232 (mean age = 56 years) patients (all had SARS-CoV-2 diagnosed via PCR AND required supplemental oxygen therapy), we failed to find an association between serum vitamin D and levels of CRP, or other inflammatory markers. However, the hazard ratio for mortality for subjects over 70 years of age (13.2) and for subjects with a serum 25(OH)D level less than 30 nmol·L−1 (4.6) remained significantly elevated even after adjustment for gender, obesity and the presence of diabetes mellitus. Subjects 70 years had significantly higher mortality with a serum 25(OH)D less than 30 nmol·L−1 (11.8% and 55%), than with a serum 25(OH)D greater than 30 nmol·L−1 (2.2% and 25%). Unvaccinated Caucasian adults with a low vitamin D state have higher mortality due to SARS CoV-2 pneumonia, which is not explained by confounders and is not closely linked with elevated serum CRP.

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