Effect of vitamin d supplements on relapse of digestive tract cancer with tumor stromal immune response: A secondary analysis of the amaterasu randomized clinical trial

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Abstract

The aim was to examine whether vitamin D supplementation (2000 IU/day) reduces the risk of relapse in a subgroup of patients with digestive tract cancer, showing a sufficient immune response in tumor stroma by conducting secondary subgroup analyses of the AMATERASU ran-domized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial (UMIN000001977). A total of 372 patients were di-vided into two subgroups stratified by the median density of immune cells infiltrating in tumor stroma into higher and lower halves. In the higher-half subgroup of CD56+ cells, the relapse ratio was significantly lower in the vitamin D group (7.4%) than in the placebo group (20.5%) (subdistri-bution hazard ratio (SHR), 0.35; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.15–0.82), but it was equivalent (25.2% vs. 22.7%) in the lower-half subgroup of CD56+ cells (SHR, 1.21; 95% CI, 0.68–2.19) with a significant interaction (Pinteraction = 0.02). Although there were no significant differences, the risk of relapse was lower in the vitamin D group than in the placebo group in the higher half of CD45RO+ memory T cells (8.9% vs. 19.2%), and of CD8+ cytotoxic T cells (11.3% vs. 22.5%). In patients with digestive tract cancer, vitamin D supplementation was hypothesized to reduce the risk of relapse in the subgroup of patients who already have an adequate infiltration of immune cells in their tumor stroma.

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Akutsu, T., Kanno, K., Okada, S., Ohdaira, H., Suzuki, Y., & Urashima, M. (2021). Effect of vitamin d supplements on relapse of digestive tract cancer with tumor stromal immune response: A secondary analysis of the amaterasu randomized clinical trial. Cancers, 13(18). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13184708

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