V
itamin
D Deficiency common in Cancer Patients
Newswise, October
4, 2011 — Miami Beach, Fla., October 2, 2011 – More than
three-quarters of cancer patients have insufficient
levels of vitamin D (25-hydroxy-vitamin D) and the
lowest levels are associated with more advanced cancer,
according to a study presented on October 2, 2011, at
the 53rd Annual Meeting of the American Society for
Radiation Oncology (ASTRO).
“Until recently, studies have not investigated whether
vitamin D has an impact on the prognosis or course of
cancer.
Researchers
are just starting to examine how vitamin D may impact
specific features of cancer, such as the stage or extent
of tumor spread, prognosis, recurrence or relapse of
disease, and even sub-types of cancer,” Thomas Churilla,
lead author of the study and a medical student at the
Commonwealth Medical College, Scranton, Pa., said.
Researchers
sought to determine the vitamin D levels of patients at
Northeast Radiation Oncology Center in Dunmore, Pa., a
community oncology practice, and to see if vitamin D
levels were related to any specific aspects of cancer.
The study involved 160 patients with a median age of 64
years and a 1:1 ratio of men to women.
The
five most common primary diagnoses were
breast, prostate, lung, thyroid and
colorectal cancer. A total of 77 percent of
patients had vitamin D concentrations either
deficient (less than 20 ng/mL) or
sub-optimal (20-30 ng/mL). The median serum
vitamin D level was 23.5 ng/mL. Regardless
of the age or sex of the patient, levels of
vitamin D were below the median predicted
for advanced stage disease in the patient
group.
Patients who were
found to be vitamin D deficient were administered
replacement therapy, increasing serum D levels by an
average of 14.9 ng/mL. Investigators will be analyzing
if vitamin D supplementation had an impact on aspects of
treatment or survival in the long-term.
“The benefits of vitamin D outside of improving bone
health are controversial, yet there are various levels
of evidence to support that vitamin D has a role in
either the prevention or the prediction of outcome of
cancer,” Churilla said. “Further study is needed to
continue to understand the relationship between vitamin
D and cancer.”
For more
information on the ASTRO Annual Meeting, visit
www.astro.org/annualmeeting. For more information on
radiation therapy for cancer, visit
www.rtanswers.org.
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