Vitamin D helps reduce depressive symptoms: meta-analysis


Wednesday, 17 August, 2022

Vitamin D helps reduce depressive symptoms: meta-analysis

Vitamin D supplementation may alleviate depressive symptoms in adults with depression, according to a meta-analysis including dozens of studies from around the world.

The new meta-analysis, carried out as part of an international collaboration between Australian, Finnish and US researchers, on the association of vitamin D supplementation with depression is claimed to be the largest one published so far. The analysis features results from 41 studies from around the world. These studies have investigated the efficacy of vitamin D in alleviating depressive symptoms in adults by randomised placebo-controlled trials in different populations.

Depressive symptoms cause a significant disease burden worldwide. The therapeutic efficacy of current antidepressants is often insufficient, which is why further ways to alleviate the symptoms of depression have been sought, for example, from nutritional research.

Vitamin D is believed to regulate central nervous system functions the disturbances of which have been associated with depression. In addition, cross-sectional studies have observed an association between depressive symptoms and vitamin D deficiency. However, previous meta-analyses on the effects of vitamin D supplementation on depression have been inconclusive. In a meta-analysis, results from several different studies are combined and analysed statistically.

The studies included those carried out in patients with depression, in the general population and in people with various physical conditions. The results of the meta-analysis show that vitamin D supplementation is more effective than a placebo in alleviating depressive symptoms in people with depression. There were major differences in the vitamin D doses used, but typically the vitamin D supplement was 50–100 micrograms per day.

“Despite the broad scope of this meta-analysis, the certainty of evidence remains low due to the heterogeneity of the populations studied and due to the risk of bias associated with a large number of studies,” said Doctoral Researcher and lead author Tuomas Mikola of the Institute of Clinical Medicine at the University of Eastern Finland. The meta-analysis is part of Mikola’s PhD thesis.

“These findings will encourage new, high-level clinical trials in patients with depression in order to shed more light on the possible role of vitamin D supplementation in the treatment of depression,” Mikola concluded.

Image credit: iStock.com/Helin Loik-Tomson

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