Vitamin D and COVID-19: Narrative Review after 3 Years of Pandemic

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Abstract

Active vitamin D [1,25(OH)2D3—calcitriol] is a secosteroid hormone whose receptor is expressed on all cells of the immune system. Vitamin D has a global anti-inflammatory effect and its role in the management of a SARS-CoV-2 infection has been investigated since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic. In this narrative review, the laboratory and clinical results of a vitamin D supplementation have been collected from both open-label and blinded randomized clinical trials. The results are generally in favor of the utility of maintaining the serum concentrations of calcifediol [25(OH)D3] at around 40 ng/mL and of the absolute usefulness of its supplementation in subjects with deficient serum levels. However, two very recent large-scale studies (one open-label, one placebo-controlled) have called into question the contribution of vitamin D to clinical practice in the era of COVID-19 vaccinations. The precise role of a vitamin D supplementation in the anti-COVID-19 armamentarium requires further investigations in light of the breakthrough which has been achieved with mass vaccinations.

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Gotelli, E., Soldano, S., Hysa, E., Paolino, S., Campitiello, R., Pizzorni, C., … Cutolo, M. (2022, November 1). Vitamin D and COVID-19: Narrative Review after 3 Years of Pandemic. Nutrients. MDPI. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14224907

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