Is vitamin D really linked to excess COVID-19 mortality?

NewsGuard 100/100 Score

The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has caused many deaths, numbering in the hundreds of thousands, over many different countries. However, the reasons for the differential mortality from region to region are far from clear, despite intensive research.

Some studies show that vitamin D levels are linked to excessive COVID-19 cases and case fatality rates. However, a new paper published on the preprint server medRxiv* in May 2020 shows that COVID-19 infections and mortality are related to life expectancy rather than to vitamin D levels.

*Important notice: medRxiv publishes preliminary scientific reports that are not peer-reviewed and, therefore, should not be regarded as conclusive, guide clinical practice/health-related behavior, or treated as established information.

Exploring Possible Solutions

The past five months are unique in human history, in that the global research community has bent its efforts in finding out more about a single disease, its predictors and risk factors, and possible vaccines and therapies. The hint that hydroxychloroquine could be a potentially effective drug against the virus led to a massive run on the drug, more commonly used to alleviate the symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory conditions of the same type.

Meanwhile, governments sparred over limited international supplies of the drug, and doctors resorted to prescribing it for themselves and their patients, despite the minimal evidence behind the initial recommendation.

Similarly, a recent study highlighting the inverse relationship between vitamin D levels and COVID-19 cases and deaths, using country-level data from 20 European nations. This was shared by 85 news outlets and shared thousands of times via social media. News reports often made it appear that vitamin D could bring down the death rate by 50%. This could lead to potentially fatal overdosing on vitamin D, just like that which happened with the drug hydroxychloroquine.

The truth is that the study reported only a significant correlation and not a cause-effect relationship between the number of cases and deaths due to COVID-19 and vitamin D levels. The problem with such correlations is that they sometimes weaken to insignificant levels or disappear altogether when confounding factors are controlled for.

A Critical Look at Vitamin D-COVID-19 Correlation

In the current study, the investigators controlled for life expectancy while re-examining the data relating to vitamin D and COVID-19 cases and deaths. The result was that while vitamin D is not a significant predictor for infections and deaths due to the pandemic virus, life expectancy is.

Controlled experiments like the randomized controlled clinical trial of recent decades are the cornerstone of scientific knowledge. The reason is that this format controls for other possible explanations, due to what are called confounding factors. This means that any observed correlations are probably the right interpretation.

In social science experiments, controlled trials are rarely possible. This means that correlations must be rigorously tested using adjustments for confounding factors, and confirmed by other types of analysis as well.

Life Expectancy A Potential Confounding Factor

In the current situation, the earlier study on vitamin D and COVID-19 cases/deaths per million population based their conclusions on the presence of a negative correlation between the two. However, there could be confounding factors such as life expectancy, related to both infections/deaths and vitamin D, which might be the true cause of this correlation.

Higher life expectancy in a nation is linked to a significant proportion of aging people, while lower life expectancy is likely to have fewer older people. Since age is a risk factor for symptomatic COVID-19, a nation with a higher life expectancy is likely to have more cases and deaths from the pandemic than one with low life expectancy.

Similarly, vitamin D levels are also linked to life expectancy, since older people are typically less likely to be outdoors for significant periods of time and therefore to receive adequate sunlight. This could lead to vitamin D deficiency.

Thus, life expectancy is linked to both factors and is likely to be a major confounding factor reducing the significance of the correlation. Only by controlling for life expectancy can the real link between vitamin D and COVID-19 infection and case fatality rates be known.

Study Shows Vitamin D Not a Predictor

When the investigators examined the correlation of COVID-19 cases and mortality vs. vitamin D alone, they found the same significant negative correlation. When the same parameter was plotted against life expectancy, they found a significant positive correlation.

Finally, plotting both vitamin D and life expectancy against COVID-19 infections and deaths, the first correlation vanishes, but the second remains significant and positive. This indicates that while vitamin D is NOT a sound predictor of the number of cases, life expectancy is.

Another conclusion could be that countries with high life expectancy could be those with a robust healthcare system, which means a higher case detection. This would also account for the earlier finding. Alternatively, since older people have a higher chance of symptomatic infection, an aged population would mean more people with severe symptoms and, therefore, more people who are likely to be tested and to have positive results as well.

The researchers conclude: “The results indicate that the correlation identified in Ilie and colleagues was most likely spurious in nature.” They offer more plausible and realistic explanations for the apparent association and show that it vanishes when life expectancy is controlled for. Randomized controlled trials must now confirm this, but the results show clearly that vitamin D should not be publicized or considered therapy or preventive measure for COVID-19.

*Important notice: medRxiv publishes preliminary scientific reports that are not peer-reviewed and, therefore, should not be regarded as conclusive, guide clinical practice/health-related behavior, or treated as established information.

Journal reference:
Dr. Liji Thomas

Written by

Dr. Liji Thomas

Dr. Liji Thomas is an OB-GYN, who graduated from the Government Medical College, University of Calicut, Kerala, in 2001. Liji practiced as a full-time consultant in obstetrics/gynecology in a private hospital for a few years following her graduation. She has counseled hundreds of patients facing issues from pregnancy-related problems and infertility, and has been in charge of over 2,000 deliveries, striving always to achieve a normal delivery rather than operative.

Citations

Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

  • APA

    Thomas, Liji. (2020, May 27). Is vitamin D really linked to excess COVID-19 mortality?. News-Medical. Retrieved on April 25, 2024 from https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200527/Is-vitamin-D-really-linked-to-excess-COVID-19-mortality.aspx.

  • MLA

    Thomas, Liji. "Is vitamin D really linked to excess COVID-19 mortality?". News-Medical. 25 April 2024. <https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200527/Is-vitamin-D-really-linked-to-excess-COVID-19-mortality.aspx>.

  • Chicago

    Thomas, Liji. "Is vitamin D really linked to excess COVID-19 mortality?". News-Medical. https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200527/Is-vitamin-D-really-linked-to-excess-COVID-19-mortality.aspx. (accessed April 25, 2024).

  • Harvard

    Thomas, Liji. 2020. Is vitamin D really linked to excess COVID-19 mortality?. News-Medical, viewed 25 April 2024, https://www.news-medical.net/news/20200527/Is-vitamin-D-really-linked-to-excess-COVID-19-mortality.aspx.

Comments

  1. Robert Brown Robert Brown Jersey says:

    The paper raises interesting questions about the promulgation of results to media by University PR departments, and the overreaching spin is put on them. This observations in the above cited paper, also like that of Ilie (using country-level data from 20 European nations https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-21211/v1 ) , need to be set in the wider context.  

    There are now 7 observational preprints looking a COVID positive patients (largest 780 patients) suggesting low vitamin d is strongly liked with severity and mortality, which studies have more inherent power than any statistical analysis of wider data. For list please see https://www.bmj.com/content/369/bmj.m1548/rr-19

    Rapid Response: Low vitamin D: high risk COVID-19 mortality? Seven preprints suggest that is case. Does low ‘D’ put BAME and elderly, at particular COVID-19 risk? Testing and Data Required. BMJ 2020;369:m1548 doi:https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m1548

    There is also a prior paper to Ilie. We chose not to try and make statistical associations for the reasons above, none the less were pleased to see others were seeing similar factors at play. Acknowledgement of our prior paper using more or less similar data would have been appreciated.

    Vitamin D deficiency: a factor in COVID-19, progression, severity and mortality? – An urgent call for research Brown R*, Sarkar A https://www.mitofit.org/images Posted Online 2020-03-24/e/ec/Brown_et_al_2020_MitoFit_Preprint_Arch_doi_10.26214_mitofit_200001.pdf

    The concluding last paragraph of the this media report over reaches the results of  a thought provoking paper. When all data is considered, in the context of biology, physiology, historic wider research, and the above 7 pre-prints, it is a reasonable posit that vitamin D features in COVID severity and mortality. Human deficiency disorders such as rickets, beriberi, scurvy, goitre, were not resolved with RCTs but observation at various levels.

    News items that deny the reasonable possibly of the observations that vitamin D factors in COVID-19 severity and mortality are arguably hugely damaging, because they risk closing off research into vitamin D and COVID, a cheap, widely available, potential mechanism for reducing the impact of COVID-19, which as well known, is sadly the cause of many early death, and much economic damage.

  2. Robert Brown Robert Brown Jersey says:

    “The paper raises interesting questions about the promulgation of results to media by University PR departments, and the overreaching spin is that is sometimes put on them. The observations in the above cited paper, also like that of Ilie (using country-level data from 20 European nations https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-21211/v1  ), need to be set in the wider context.  
    There are now 7 observational preprints looking a COVID positive patients (largest 780 patients) suggesting low vitamin d is strongly liked with severity and mortality, the studies have more inherent power than any statistical analysis of wider data. For list please see https://www.bmj.com/content/369/bmj.m1548/rr-19
    Rapid Response: Low vitamin D: high risk COVID-19 mortality? Seven preprints suggest that is case. Does low ‘D’ put BAME and elderly, at particular COVID-19 risk? Testing and Data Required. BMJ 2020;369:m1548 doi:https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m1548  
    There is also a prior paper to Ilie. We chose not to try and make statistical associations for the reasons above, none the less were pleased to see others were seeing similar factors at play. Acknowledgement of our prior paper by Ilie, who used more or less similar data would have been appreciated.
    Vitamin D deficiency: a factor in COVID-19, progression, severity and mortality? – An urgent call for research Brown R*, Sarkar A https://www.mitofit.org/images Posted Online 2020-03-24/e/ec/Brown_et_al_2020_MitoFit_Preprint_Arch_doi_10.26214_mitofit_200001.pdf  
    The concluding last paragraph of the above media report “the results show clearly that vitamin D should not be publicized or considered therapy or preventive measure for COVID-19.” over reaches the results of a thought-provoking paper.
    When all data is considered, in the context of biology, physiology, historic wider research, and the above 7 pre-prints, it is a reasonable posit that vitamin D features in COVID severity and mortality. Human deficiency disorders such as rickets, beriberi, scurvy, goitre, were not resolved with RCTs but with observation at various levels.
    News items that deny the reasonable possibility, requiring further research, based on observational studies, that vitamin D factors in COVID-19 severity and mortality, are arguably hugely damaging, because they risk closing off much needed further research into vitamin D and COVID, as a cheap, widely available, potential mechanism for reducing the impact of COVID-19, which as well known, is sadly the cause of many early death, and much economic hardship”

  3. Abe Lee Haney Abe Lee Haney Israel says:

    It seems to me that there is often among scientists and others this clear opposition to simple, cheap, potentially life saving (partial) solutions to major medical issues. In the article it is claimed that HCQ had minimal evidence of being effective when the contrary was true. Political, financial and prestige considerations have muddled the debate. The visceral hatred toward Donald Trump who promoted HCQ, has done great damage to science and health. Thousands may have needlessly died because of this hostility toward the messenger. I hope for sanity to return so that eventually a proper evaluation of these aids may be  brought forth and learn from the terrible mistakes made out of petty interests.

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
Post a new comment
Post

While we only use edited and approved content for Azthena answers, it may on occasions provide incorrect responses. Please confirm any data provided with the related suppliers or authors. We do not provide medical advice, if you search for medical information you must always consult a medical professional before acting on any information provided.

Your questions, but not your email details will be shared with OpenAI and retained for 30 days in accordance with their privacy principles.

Please do not ask questions that use sensitive or confidential information.

Read the full Terms & Conditions.

You might also like...
Vitamin D deficiency persists despite easy access, review suggests need for tailored supplements