Skip to main content
. 2019 Nov 4;33(12):1187–1199. doi: 10.1007/s40263-019-00674-8

Table 1.

Association of 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels with relapse risk

Study Year n Follow-up (years; median) Proportional decrease in IR/RR/HR for each 25 nmol/L increase in 25(OH)D (%)a Specification
Simpson et al. [82] 2010 145 0.5 23 RRMS
Mowry et al. [86] 2010 110 1.7 34 Pediatric RRMS/CIS
Mowry et al. [43] 2012 469 5 14 Only HLA-DR15*01 single RRMS/CIS, not in whole cohort
Runia et al. [87] 2012 73 1.7 27b RRMS
Ascherio et al. [40] 2014 465 5 26 CIS
Fitzgerald et al. [44] 2015 1482 2 NR RRMS, no effect ARR
Kuhle et al. [41] 2015 1047 4.3 24c CIS, not in multivariate
Muris et al. [42] 2016 340 3 32 Only RRMS < 37.5 years, not in whole cohort

25(OH)D 25-hydroxyvitamin D, ARR annualized relapse rate, CIS clinical isolated syndrome, HLA human leukocyte antigen, HR hazard ratio, IR incidence risk, NR not reported, RR relative risk, RRMS relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis

aIR, RR, and HR for a relapse (yes/no) values were linearly recalculated to correspond with a 25 nmol/L (10 ng/L) increase of 25(OH)D levels, except for Runia et al. [87] and Kuhle et al. [41]

bFor each doubling of 25(OH)D (non-linear relationship)

cOnly quartiles reported (median level 49.3 nmol/L)