Author:
Fatahi Somaye,Alyahyawi Naseem,Albadawi Naryman,Mardali Farzaneh,Dara Naghi,Sohouli Mohammad Hassan,Prabahar Kousalya,Rohani Pejman,Koushki Nazanin,Sayyari Aliakbar,Hosseini Amir Hossein,Abu-Zaid Ahmed
Abstract
AimVitamin D deficiency is very common among children with IBD. Since there are conflicting results regarding the association of vitamin D with IBD, we conducted this systematic review to confirm the association of vitamin D with IBD.MethodsWe conducted a systematic search in Scopus, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, PubMed, and Google Scholar to find relevant studies. Articles with cross-sectional and case-control designs that reported the association between vitamin D and IBD among children were included.ResultsEventually, 9 studies (with 16 effect sizes) reported the mean and SD or the median and the interquartile range of serum vitamin D levels in both subjects with IBD and control subjects. The random effects meta-analysis revealed that subjects with IBD had −1.159 ng/ml (95% CI: −2.783, 0.464) lower serum vitamin D concentrations compared with their healthy counterparts, but this difference was not significant. A total of 14 studies (with 18 effect sizes) with 2,602 participants provided information for the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency in patients with IBD as 44% (95% CI: 0.34–0.54) with significant heterogeneity noted among studies (p< 0.001; I2= 97.31%).ConclusionThis systematic and meta-analysis study revealed that vitamin D deficiency was associated with IBD. Longitudinal studies should be conducted in the future to confirm our findings. Large randomized controlled trials assessing the doses of supplementation of vitamin D would provide a better understanding of the association between vitamin D and IBD.
Subject
Nutrition and Dietetics,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Food Science
Cited by
6 articles.
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