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Authors Huang SJ, Wang XH, Liu ZD, Cao WL, Han Y, Ma AG, Xu SF
Received 25 December 2014
Accepted for publication 30 June 2016
Published 28 December 2016 Volume 2017:11 Pages 91—102
DOI http://doi.org/10.2147/DDDT.S79870
Checked for plagiarism Yes
Review by Single-blind
Peer reviewer comments 4
Editor who approved publication: Professor Wei Duan
Background and
aim: To conduct meta-analyses of all
published studies on various aspects of association between vitamin D and
tuberculosis (TB).
Methods: PubMed and Web of Knowledge were searched for all
properly controlled studies on vitamin D and TB. Pooled odds ratio, mean
difference or standardized mean difference, and its corresponding 95%
confidence interval were calculated with the Cochrane Review Manager 5.3.
Results: A significantly lower vitamin D level was found in TB
patients vs controls; vitamin D deficiency (VDD) was associated with an
increased risk of TB, although such an association was lacking in the African
population and in the human immunodeficiency virus-infected African population.
A significantly lower vitamin D level was found in human immunodeficiency
virus-TB-coinfected African patients receiving antiretroviral treatment who
developed TB-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome vs those
who did not develop TB-associated immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome.
VDD was associated with an increased risk of developing active TB in those
subjects with latent TB infection and with an increased risk of tuberculin skin
test conversion/TB infection conversion, and the trend toward a lower vitamin D
level in active TB patients vs latent TB infection subjects did not reach
statistical significance, indicating that VDD was more likely a risk factor
than a consequence of TB. This concept was further strengthened by our result
that anti-TB treatment did not affect vitamin D level in TB patients receiving
the treatment.
Conclusion: Our analyses revealed an association between vitamin D
and TB. VDD is more likely a risk factor for TB than its consequence. More
studies are needed to determine whether vitamin D supplementation is beneficial
to TB prevention and treatment.
Keywords: vitamin D, vitamin D deficiency,
tuberculosis, 25-hydroxyvitamin D, meta-analysis