Effect of vitamin D3 on asthma treatment failures in adults with symptomatic asthma and lower vitamin D levels: the VIDA randomized clinical trial.

JAMA
May 2014
Citations:253
Influential Citations:4
Interventional (Human) Studies
80
S2 IconPDF Icon

Enhanced Details

Methods
Adults (≥18 years) with asthma and vitamin D insufficiency (serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D < 30 ng/mL); randomized, double-masked, parallel-group trial conducted across 9 US academic centers; 408 participants randomized (201 to Vitamin D3, 207 to placebo) after a run-in period with inhaled corticosteroid therapy.
Intervention
Oral vitamin D3: 100,000 IU once, followed by 4000 IU/day for 28 weeks.
Results
Vitamin D3 added to inhaled corticosteroid did not reduce time to first asthma treatment failure over 28 weeks (28% vs 29%; adjusted HR 0.9, 95% CI 0.6-1.3; P=0.54). It did not significantly affect asthma exacerbations, lung function, symptoms, quality of life, or airway inflammation compared with placebo. A small difference in the total daily inhaled corticosteroid dose to maintain control was observed, but it is not clinically meaningful. Conclusion: Vitamin D3 supplementation is not supported to improve outcomes in adults with symptomatic asthma and vitamin D insufficiency.
Limitations
Potentially underpowered to detect small effects due to a lower-than-expected event rate in the control group; wide variability in post-treatment 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels indicating variable response to vitamin D3; changes in asthma exacerbation definitions during the study affecting generalizability; no clear impact on airway inflammation; long-term safety beyond the trial not assessed.

Abstract

IMPORTANCE In asthma and other diseases, vitamin D insufficiency is associated with adverse outcomes. It is not known if supplementing inhaled corticosteroids with oral vitamin D3 improves outcomes in patients with asthma and vitamin D insufficiency....