Suppr超能文献

维生素 D 补充对肌肉骨骼健康的影响:系统评价、荟萃分析和试验序贯分析。

Effects of vitamin D supplementation on musculoskeletal health: a systematic review, meta-analysis, and trial sequential analysis.

机构信息

Department of Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

Department of Medicine, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.

出版信息

Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2018 Nov;6(11):847-858. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(18)30265-1. Epub 2018 Oct 4.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The effects of vitamin D on fractures, falls, and bone mineral density are uncertain, particularly for high vitamin D doses. We aimed to determine the effect of vitamin D supplementation on fractures, falls, and bone density.

METHODS

In this systematic review, random-effects meta-analysis, and trial sequential analysis, we used findings from literature searches in previously published meta-analyses. We updated these findings by searching PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Central on Sept 14, 2017, and Feb 26, 2018, using the search term "vitamin D" and additional keywords, without any language restrictions. We assessed randomised controlled trials of adults (>18 years) that compared vitamin D with untreated controls, placebo, or lower-dose vitamin D supplements. Trials with multiple interventions (eg, co-administered calcium and vitamin D) were eligible if the study groups differed only by use of vitamin D. We excluded trials of hydroxylated vitamin D analogues. Eligible studies included outcome data for total or hip fractures, falls, or bone mineral density measured at the lumbar spine, total hip, femoral neck, total body, or forearm. We extracted data about participant characteristics, study design, interventions, outcomes, funding sources, and conflicts of interest. The co-primary endpoints were participants with at least one fracture, at least one hip fracture, or at least one fall; we compared data for fractures and falls using relative risks with an intention-to-treat analysis using all available data. The secondary endpoints were the percentage change in bone mineral density from baseline at lumbar spine, total hip, femoral neck, total body, and forearm.

FINDINGS

We identified 81 randomised controlled trials (n=53 537 participants) that reported fracture (n=42), falls (n=37), or bone mineral density (n=41). In pooled analyses, vitamin D had no effect on total fracture (36 trials; n=44 790, relative risk 1·00, 95% CI 0·93-1·07), hip fracture (20 trials; n=36 655, 1·11, 0·97-1·26), or falls (37 trials; n=34 144, 0·97, 0·93-1·02). Results were similar in randomised controlled trials of high-dose versus low-dose vitamin D and in subgroup analyses of randomised controlled trials using doses greater than 800 IU per day. In pooled analyses, there were no clinically relevant between-group differences in bone mineral density at any site (range -0·16% to 0·76% over 1-5 years). For total fracture and falls, the effect estimate lay within the futility boundary for relative risks of 15%, 10%, 7·5%, and 5% (total fracture only), suggesting that vitamin D supplementation does not reduce fractures or falls by these amounts. For hip fracture, at a 15% relative risk, the effect estimate lay between the futility boundary and the inferior boundary, meaning there is reliable evidence that vitamin D supplementation does not reduce hip fractures by this amount, but uncertainty remains as to whether it might increase hip fractures. The effect estimate lay within the futility boundary at thresholds of 0·5% for total hip, forearm, and total body bone mineral density, and 1·0% for lumbar spine and femoral neck, providing reliable evidence that vitamin D does not alter these outcomes by these amounts.

INTERPRETATION

Our findings suggest that vitamin D supplementation does not prevent fractures or falls, or have clinically meaningful effects on bone mineral density. There were no differences between the effects of higher and lower doses of vitamin D. There is little justification to use vitamin D supplements to maintain or improve musculoskeletal health. This conclusion should be reflected in clinical guidelines.

FUNDING

Health Research Council of New Zealand.

摘要

背景

维生素 D 对骨折、跌倒和骨密度的影响尚不确定,尤其是高剂量的维生素 D。我们旨在确定维生素 D 补充剂对骨折、跌倒和骨密度的影响。

方法

在这项系统评价、随机效应荟萃分析和试验序贯分析中,我们使用了先前发表的荟萃分析中的文献检索结果。我们通过在 2017 年 9 月 14 日和 2018 年 2 月 26 日在 PubMed、Embase 和 Cochrane Central 上搜索“vitamin D”和其他关键词,没有任何语言限制,更新了这些发现。我们评估了比较维生素 D 与未治疗对照组、安慰剂或低剂量维生素 D 补充剂的成年人(>18 岁)的随机对照试验。如果试验组仅通过使用维生素 D 进行区分,则包含多种干预措施(例如,共同给予钙和维生素 D)的试验是合格的。我们排除了羟化维生素 D 类似物的试验。合格研究包括总或髋部骨折、跌倒或腰椎、全髋、股骨颈、全骨或前臂骨密度的测量结果。我们提取了参与者特征、研究设计、干预措施、结局、资金来源和利益冲突的数据。主要终点是至少发生一次骨折、至少一次髋部骨折或至少一次跌倒的参与者;我们使用意向治疗分析,使用所有可用数据比较骨折和跌倒的数据,相对风险为 1.00,95%CI 为 0.93-1.07。次要终点是腰椎、全髋、股骨颈、全骨和前臂的骨密度从基线的百分比变化。

发现

我们确定了 81 项随机对照试验(n=53537 名参与者),报告了骨折(n=42)、跌倒(n=37)或骨密度(n=41)的情况。在汇总分析中,维生素 D 对总骨折(36 项试验;n=440790,相对风险 1.00,95%CI 0.93-1.07)、髋部骨折(20 项试验;n=3655,1.11,0.97-1.26)或跌倒(37 项试验;n=34144,0.97,0.93-1.02)没有影响。高剂量与低剂量维生素 D 的随机对照试验以及每天使用剂量大于 800IU 的随机对照试验的亚组分析结果相似。在汇总分析中,在任何部位的骨密度(1-5 年内 0.16%至 0.76%)没有临床相关的组间差异。对于总骨折和跌倒,相对风险为 15%、10%、7.5%和 5%(仅总骨折)的效果估计值处于无效边界内,表明维生素 D 补充剂不会减少这些数量的骨折或跌倒。对于髋部骨折,在 15%的相对风险下,效果估计值处于无效边界和下边界之间,这意味着有可靠的证据表明维生素 D 补充剂不会减少这种程度的髋部骨折,但仍存在不确定性,因为不知道它是否会增加髋部骨折的风险。在总髋、前臂和全骨骨密度的阈值为 0.5%,以及腰椎和股骨颈的阈值为 1.0%时,效果估计值处于无效边界内,这提供了可靠的证据表明维生素 D 不会以这些量改变这些结果。

解释

我们的研究结果表明,维生素 D 补充剂不能预防骨折或跌倒,也不能对骨密度产生有临床意义的影响。较高和较低剂量的维生素 D 的效果没有差异。没有理由使用维生素 D 补充剂来维持或改善肌肉骨骼健康。这一结论应反映在临床指南中。

资金

新西兰健康研究理事会。

文献检索

告别复杂PubMed语法,用中文像聊天一样搜索,搜遍4000万医学文献。AI智能推荐,让科研检索更轻松。

立即免费搜索

文件翻译

保留排版,准确专业,支持PDF/Word/PPT等文件格式,支持 12+语言互译。

免费翻译文档

深度研究

AI帮你快速写综述,25分钟生成高质量综述,智能提取关键信息,辅助科研写作。

立即免费体验