Moderate vitamin D deficiency is associated with changes in knee and hip pain in older adults: a 5-year longitudinal study

Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases
Q1
Apr 2013
Citations:88
Influential Citations:2
Observational Studies (Human)
80
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Enhanced Details

Methods
Longitudinal population-based cohort of community-dwelling adults aged 50–80 years at baseline in Southern Tasmania; randomly selected from electoral rolls; baseline data collected 2002–2004 (n=1099); follow-ups at ~2.6 and 5 years; serum 25-OHD measured by radioimmunoassay; knee pain assessed at Phase 1 and 3, hip pain at Phase 2 and 3 using WOMAC; observational design; linear regression analyses adjusted for age, sex, BMI, season, and structural OA factors; no vitamin D dosing information; complete-case data: knee n=764, hip n=765.
Results
Moderate vitamin D deficiency (25-OHD 12.5–25 nmol/L) independently predicted incident or worsening knee pain over 5 years (beta 2.41; 95% CI 0.88 to 3.94; p=0.002). A similar trend for hip pain over 2.4 years did not reach statistical significance (p=0.083). When 25-OHD was analyzed as a continuous measure, no linear association emerged. Dichotomising at 25 nmol/L showed increased knee-pain risk; associations persisted after covariate adjustment. Sensitivity analyses with same-season data strengthened knee-pain effects; a 30 nmol/L cutoff reduced knee-pain effects and eliminated hip-pain associations. Conclusion: Moderate vitamin D deficiency independently predicts worsening knee pain (and possibly hip pain) in older adults; correcting moderate deficiency may attenuate pain progression; raising 25-OHD above the moderate-deficiency threshold is unlikely to yield additional benefits.
Limitations
Limited pain sites (knees and hips); short follow-up for hip pain; differential loss to follow-up (older, higher BMI, and worse pain with lower 25-OHD more likely to drop out); no participants with severe deficiency (<12.5 nmol/L); only baseline 25-OHD measured; duration of deficiency unknown; observational design; randomized trials needed to test supplementation effects.

Abstract

Background Vitamin D is important for bone, cartilage and muscle function but there are few studies on its association with joint pain. Objective To investigate whether serum vitamin D predicts change in knee and hip pain in older adults. Methods Lon...