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Key Gaps Remain in Understanding Health Effects of Vitamin D

by Barbara Kram, Editor | August 19, 2008
Vitamin D
Despite considerable progress in research to understand the health effects of vitamin D, experts convened by the NIH to review the available data found major gaps in the evidence. The data are strongest in the area of bone health among elderly men and post-menopausal women, suggesting that increased vitamin D intake can improve bone health and prevent falls. For other age groups and health issues, though, it is too early to say conclusively whether more vitamin D might be beneficial.

An in-depth review of current research on the health effects of vitamin D is being published as the proceedings of the NIH conference, "Vitamin D and Health in the 21st Century: An Update", which will appear in an August 2008 supplement to the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

Intriguing findings from research conducted in recent years have led to increased interest in vitamin D among health care providers, researchers, and the general public, including concern about possibly widespread deficiency, calls for supplementation, and even use of large doses of vitamin D as treatments for a variety of conditions.
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"Given recent findings, it's easy to see why people are so enthusiastic about the potential power of vitamin D, but we must recognize the limitations of any study and exercise caution when making broad public health recommendations," said Mary Frances Picciano, Ph.D., a senior nutrition research scientist in the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, who co-authored an overview of the conference included in the journal supplement. "This is a very complex set of issues and there is still a lot we don't know about how vitamin D levels affect health, especially across different age groups and ethnic populations."

"It's tempting to think that an essential nutrient is safe at any level - that if some is good, more is better," said Paul M. Coates, Ph.D., director of the Office of Dietary Supplements. "We've learned that this isn't always true, and there are potential harms associated with high levels of many nutrients."

Participants in the NIH conference identified a number of limitations of the existing evidence on vitamin D, including:

* Many studies have failed to control for factors that could confuse study findings, such as diet, baseline vitamin D status, age, disease, season (as relevant to sun exposure), and physical activity.
* Few studies have examined the effects of vitamin D independent of calcium or other nutrients.
* Reliable data on the vitamin D content of foods is not available.