University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada.
Clinical Research Department, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 15;13(11):e0207022. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207022. eCollection 2018.
HIV-positive children, adolescents, and young adults are at increased risk poor musculoskeletal outcomes. Increased incidence of vitamin D deficiency in youth living with HIV may further adversely affect musculoskeletal health. We investigated the impact of vitamin D supplementation on a range of musculoskeletal outcomes among individuals aged 0-25 years living with HIV.
A systematic review was conducted using databases: PubMed/Medline, CINAHL, Web of Knowledge, and EMBASE. Interventional randomised control trials, quasi-experimental trials, and previous systematic reviews/meta-analyses were included. Outcomes included: BMD, BMC, fracture incidence, muscle strength, linear growth (height-for-age Z-score [HAZ]), and biochemical/endocrine biomarkers including bone turnover markers.
Of 497 records, 20 studies met inclusion criteria. Thirteen studies were conducted in North America, one in Asia, two in Europe, and four in Sub-Saharan Africa. High-dose vitamin D supplementation regimens (1,000-7,000 IU/day) were successful in achieving serum 25-hydroxyvitamin-D (25OHD) concentrations above study-defined thresholds. No improvements were observed in BMD, BMC, or in muscle power, force and strength; however, improvements in neuromuscular motor skills were demonstrated. HAZ was unaffected by low-dose (200-400 IU/day) supplementation. A single study found positive effects on HAZ with high-dose supplementation (7,000 vs 4,000IU/day).
Measured bone outcomes were unaffected by high-dose vitamin D supplementation, even when target 25OHD measurements were achieved. This may be due to: insufficient sample size, follow-up, intermittent dosing, non-standardised definitions of vitamin D deficiency, or heterogeneity of enrolment criteria pertaining to baseline vitamin D concentration. High-dose vitamin D may improve HAZ and neuromuscular motor skills. Adequately powered trials are needed in settings where HIV burden is greatest. PROSPERO Number: CRD42016042938.
HIV 阳性的儿童、青少年和年轻成年人发生骨骼肌肉不良结局的风险增加。生活在 HIV 环境中的年轻人维生素 D 缺乏的发生率增加,可能会进一步对骨骼肌肉健康产生不利影响。我们调查了维生素 D 补充对生活在 HIV 环境中的 0-25 岁个体的一系列骨骼肌肉结局的影响。
我们使用 PubMed/Medline、CINAHL、Web of Knowledge 和 EMBASE 数据库进行了系统评价。纳入的研究类型包括:随机对照干预试验、准实验性试验和之前的系统评价/荟萃分析。结局指标包括:骨密度、骨矿物质含量、骨折发生率、肌肉力量、线性生长(身高年龄 Z 评分[HAZ])和生化/内分泌生物标志物,包括骨转换标志物。
在 497 条记录中,有 20 项研究符合纳入标准。其中 13 项研究在北美进行,1 项在亚洲进行,2 项在欧洲进行,4 项在撒哈拉以南非洲进行。高剂量维生素 D 补充方案(1,000-7,000IU/天)成功地使血清 25-羟维生素 D(25OHD)浓度达到研究定义的阈值以上。骨密度、骨矿物质含量或肌肉力量、肌力和强度均无改善,但神经肌肉运动技能有所提高。低剂量(200-400IU/天)补充对 HAZ 没有影响。一项研究发现高剂量补充(7,000 与 4,000IU/天)对 HAZ 有积极影响。
即使达到目标 25OHD 测量值,高剂量维生素 D 补充也不会影响骨骼测量结果。这可能是由于:样本量不足、随访时间短、间歇性给药、维生素 D 缺乏的定义不标准、或与基线维生素 D 浓度相关的入组标准存在异质性。高剂量维生素 D 可能会改善 HAZ 和神经肌肉运动技能。在 HIV 负担最大的地区,需要进行充分的、有影响力的试验。PROSPERO 编号:CRD42016042938。