Vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent in patients with
HIV and is associated with an increased risk of disease progression,
investigators from the EuroSIDA cohort report in the online edition of AIDS.
The investigators from Europe, Argentina and Israel found a
strong relationship between low levels of the vitamin and an increased risk of
all-cause mortality and the development of an AIDS-defining condition. They
comment: “vitamin D deficiency therefore represents a new, independent,
unfavourable prognostic marker in HIV infection.”
There is a some evidence showing that
vitamin D deficiency is linked with a number of serious illnesses in the
HIV-negative population, including cancers and heart disease, but the strongest association is between deficiency and bone thinning.
Levels of the vitamin below 10 nanograms
per millilitre (ng/ml) are widely accepted as
showing deficiency.
A
number of studies have demonstrated that vitamin D deficiency is common in
patients with HIV. Possible reasons include low levels of sun exposure,
poor absorption, kidney or liver impairment, or the interference of
antiretroviral drugs with vitamin D metabolism.
Investigators from the EuroSIDA cohort wished to establish
the prevalence of vitamin D deficiency among their patients, its risk factors,
and its relationship with disease progression.
A total of 1985 patients were involved in the study. Most of
the patients (82%) were taking combination antiretroviral therapy.
Vitamin D levels were assessed on entry to the study, and
placed into three categories: low (below 10 ng/ml); medium (10 to 30 ng/ml); and
high (above 30 ng/ml).
Results showed that 24% of participants had vitamin D
deficiency, 65% had moderate levels of the vitamin, and only 11% had vitamin D
levels above 30 ng/ml.
“The present results confirm that vitamin D insufficiency or
deficiency is frequent in HIV-infected persons,” comment the investigators.
For statistical reasons, the patients were then stratified
into three categories (below 12 ng/m; 12 to 20 ng/ml and above 20 ng/ml).
Factors associated with vitamin D levels in the lowest
tertile included black race (p = 0.0006), injecting drug use (p = 0.02),
heterosexual HIV risk (p = 0.0001), and older age (p = 0.01).
HIV therapy that included a protease inhibitor was
associated with a lower risk of vitamin D deficiency (p = 0.001). The
investigators note this finding is “of unclear biological relevance”.
Next, the researchers examined the relationship between
vitamin D levels and disease progression.
Five years after baseline, 10% of patients with vitamin D in
the lowest tertile had developed AIDS, compared to 6% of individuals in the
middle group and 5% of patients with the highest vitamin D levels.
Mortality rates also differed according to vitamin D status,
and were highest for patients with vitamin D deficiency (11 vs 7 vs
6%). Rates of non-AIDS-defining
events were 9 vs 7 vs 7%.
Low levels of vitamin D were related to poorer outcomes.
Compared to participants with the lowest levels of vitamin D, people in the middle and upper tertiles had a significantly lower risk of
progression to AIDS (p = 0.00086 and p = 0.02 respectively).
Similarly, the risk of death was lower for people in the
middle and upper tertiles (p = 0.045 and p = 0.003 respectively).
People with the highest levels of vitamin D were also
significantly less likely than those with vitamin levels below 12 ng/ml to die
of a non-AIDS-related cause.
Adjustment for CD4 cell count and viral load further
confirmed that patients with moderate or high levels of vitamin D had a reduced
risk of death (p = 0.025 and p = 0.048 respectively).
“A very low [vitamin] D level was associated with events,
even in the case of virologically controlled HIV infection and immune
restoration,” the authors emphasise.
They conclude: “These results provide strong evidence that
vitamin D deficiency is an important cofactor in HIV disease progression, even
in the setting of widespread, efficient cART [combination antiretroviral
therapy]. Whether the relationship between vitamin D deficiency and events is
casual must now be addressed.”