Hussain et al23
|
Prospective cohort |
9135 adults older than 40 years who were undergoing hip arthroplasty for OA |
|
Increasing serum vitamin D levels was associated with increased risk of hip arthroplasty in men. No significant difference was found in women |
Jin et al25
|
Randomized controlled trial |
413 patients with low vitamin D serum levels (12.5-60 nmol/L) were enrolled in the study. A total of 209 patients received oral vitamin D3 (50,000 IU) and 204 patients received identical placebos |
No vitamin D sufficiency levels were established |
Monthly treatment with oral vitamin D did not produce significant clinical or cartilage volume structural differences in vitamin D–deficient knee OA cases over time. Results did not support vitamin D supplementation |
Arden et al4
|
Double-blind, randomized placebo-controlled trial |
474 patients aged older than 50 years with radiographically evident knee OA were given either 800 IU cholecalciferol daily or placebo |
Vitamin D deficiency <10 ng/mL
Vitamin D insufficiency = 10.1-20.0 ng/mL
Vitamin D sufficient ≥20 ng/mL
|
There was no significant difference in rate of joint space narrowing in the medial compartment of knees due to vitamin D supplementation |