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. 2020 Aug 18;8:447. doi: 10.3389/fped.2020.00447

Table 1.

Summary of studies on the possible role of vitamin D in the development of food allergy.

References Study Age, sample Results Definition of vitamin D deficiency
Sharief et al. (26) Retrospective study 3,136 children/adolescents and 3,454 adults 25(OH)D levels <15 ng/ml associated with peanut allergy, no consistent associations seen in adults 25(OH)D deficiency <15 ng/ml, insufficiency 15–29 ng/ml
Mullins et al. (27) Retrospective study 115 peanut allergic patients younger than 72 months Non-linear relationship between neonatal 25(OH)D3 levels and peanut allergy in children under 6 months of age, slightly higher levels (75–99.9 nmol/L) linked with lower vs. those in the reference group (50–74.9 nmol/L) Neonatal concentration of 25(OH)D divided into four groups: <50, 50–74.9, 75–99.9, and >100 nmol/L. The reference group was considered between 50 and 74.9 nmol/L
Kim et al. (28) Retrospective study 18,181 patients 10 years or older (2,814 patients with food-induced anaphylaxis and 15,367 people with available serum vitamin D measurements) Higher incidence of food-induced anaphylaxis in regions with lower vitamin D levels in the population Not defined
Kull et al. (29) Prospective birth cohort 4,089 newborn infants were followed for 4 years Water-soluble form increased the risk of allergic disease in children up to the age of 4 years compared with supplementation of same vitamin given in peanut oil Not defined
Camargo et al. (30) Prospective pre-birth cohort study 1,194 mother–child pairs followed up through age 3 years Higher maternal intake of vitamin D during pregnancy may decrease the risk of recurrent wheeze in early childhood Not defined
Nwaru et al. (31) Prospective cohort study 971 children with 5-year follow-up It was found that maternal intake of vitamin D was inversely associated with sensitization to food allergens Not defined
Liu et al. (32) Prospective birth cohort study 649 children who were enrolled at birth and followed from birth onward Vitamin D deficiency may increase the risk of food sensitization among individuals with certain genotypes Cord blood 25(OH)D3 <11 ng/ml
Jones et al. (33) Prospective birth cohort study 231 mother–child pairs, derived from a larger (n = 669) prospective birth cohort, followed up until 1 year of age Reduced fetal exposure to vitamin D increases the risk of eczema in infants by 12 months of age 25(OH)D3 levels cutoffs were divided in <50 nmol/L, 50–74.99 nmol/L, >75 nmol/L
Weisse et al. (34) Prospective 378 mother–child pairs followed up until 2 years of age High vitamin D levels in pregnancy and at birth may contribute to a higher risk for food allergy The assay detection limit was defined as 6.7 ng/ml for maternal 25(OH)D3 and 5.2 ng/ml for maternal 25(OH)D2. Detection limit for cord blood 25(OH)D3 and D2 was 3 ng/ml
Allen et al. (35) Australian large prospective cohort study 577 infants, 1 year of age Vitamin D insufficiency more likely associated with peanut and/or egg allergy. Vitamin D insufficiency linked to multiple food allergies (≥2) rather than a single food allergy Vitamin D insufficiency: ≤ 50 nmol/L
Chiu et al. (36) Prospective study 186 children (0–4 years) Cord blood 25(OH)D levels inversely linked with the risk of milk sensitization at 2 years of age Low vitamin D levels <20 ng/ml
Chawes et al. (37) Prospective clinical study 257 children Cord blood 25(OH) vitamin D levels defined as <50 nmol/L was not associated with allergic sensitization Cord blood 25(OH)-Vitamin D: deficient, 50 nmol/L; insufficient, 50–75 nmol/L; sufficient, >75 nmol/L
Hennessy et al. (38) Prospective Cork BASELINE Birth Cohort Study Vitamin D was measured in maternal sera at 15 weeks of gestation (n = 1,537) and umbilical cord blood (n = 1,050) The investigators did not observe any association between vitamin D during pregnancy or at birth with allergic disease outcomes at 2 and 5 years old Maternal 25 (OH) D divided into <30 nmol/L; 30–49.9 nmol/L; 50–74.9 nmol/L; ≥75 nmol/L
Ercan et al. (39) Prospective, observational, case–control study 111 children <2 years of age No statistically significant relationship between the CMPA group and healthy controls in terms of 25(OH)D levels Vitamin D deficiency ≤ 20 ng/ml, insufficiency 21–29 ng/ml, adequate ≥30 ng/ml
Sardecka et al. (48) Prospective two-stage study 138 infants with CMA and 101 healthy infants Children with increased Foxp3mRNA expression (predictive of faster gain of tolerance in infants with CMA) have lower serum vitamin D levels than healthy children 25 (OH)D concentration sufficient ≥30 ng/ml for the Polish population
Baek et al. (49) Cross-sectional study 226 children aged 3–24 months with atopic dermatitis or suspected food allergy VDD increased the risk of food allergen sensitization especially to milk and wheat. The polysensitization group had significantly lower levels of 25(OH)D than the non-sensitization and monosensitization group Serum 25(OH)D levels: deficiency, <20.0 ng/ml; insufficiency, 20.0–29.0 ng/ml; and sufficiency, ≥30.0 ng/ml
Rosendahl et al. (50) Randomized controlled study 975 infants followed up until 12 months of age No differences between the vitamin D supplementation groups in food sensitization at 12 months. Possible adverse effect of high concentrations of vitamin D 25 (OH)D2 considered sufficient for concentrations ≥50 nmol/L
Guo et al. (51) Large observational study 2,642 children followed up until 2 years of age No evidence found supporting the link between low levels of 25 (OH)D and allergic sensitization to various allergens 25(OH)D concentrations insufficient <75 nmol/L and sufficient otherwise
Thorisdottir et al. (52) Longitudinal Icelandic study 144 children followed up until 6 years of age At 12 months, IgE-sensitized children had a lower intake of vitamin D, but no significant difference in mean serum 25(OH)D was found between IgE-sensitized and non-sensitized children, nor at 12 months or 6 years Vitamin D deficient: <30 nmol/L and vitamin D intake from diet and supplements combined did not exceed 25 μg/day in infancy or at 6 years