Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D in a West African population of tuberculosis patients and unmatched healthy controls2

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Abstract

Background: Little is known regarding vitamin D deficiency (VDD) in African populations and in tuberculosis (TB) patients. VDD has been shown to be associated with TB.

Objective: We aimed to compare the degree of vitamin D insufficiency (VDI) and VDD in TB patients and healthy adult controls in a West African population.

Design: An unmatched case-control study was performed at a Demographic Surveillance Site in Guinea-Bissau. Serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 [25(OH)D3] concentrations were measured in 362 TB patients and in 494 controls.

Results: Hypovitaminosis D [25(OH)D3 ≤ 75 nmol/L] was more common in TB patients, but VDD [25(OH)D3 ≤ 50 nmol/L] was more common and more severe in controls. We observed hypovitaminosis D in 46% (167/362) of the TB patients and in 39% (193/494) of the controls; the relative risk (RR) of hypovitaminosis D was 1.18 (95% CI: 1.01, 1.38). VDD was observed in 8.5% (31/362) of the TB patients and in 13.2% (65/494) of the controls. The RR was 0.65 (95% CI: 0.43, 0.98), mainly because severe VDD [25(OH)D3 ≤ 25 nmol/L] was observed in only 1 of 362 TB patients (0.2%) and in 24 of 494 controls (4.9%). After adjustment for background factors, hypovitaminosis D was not more frequent in TB patients than in healthy controls, but the mean serum 25(OH)D3 concentration remained lower.

Conclusions: Hypovitaminosis D was highly prevalent in TB patients and in healthy controls living at 12 °N; severe VDD was rare in TB patients. The finding indicates that the serum 25(OH)D3 concentration is associated with TB infection, but whether this role is a symptom or is causal was not established.

Keywords:

Hypovitaminosis D
25-hydroxyvitamin D
tuberculosis
Guinea-Bissau

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2

Supported mainly by The Danish Research Council for Developmental Research and by the Segels, Beckett, SSAC, Jakob Madsen, Lily Benthine Lund, and Skejby University Hospital research foundations. CW was supported by a PhD scholarship from the University of Aarhus.