Assessing vitamin D as a biomarker in inflammatory bowel disease.

JGH Open

Department of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Monash Health Clayton Victoria Australia.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers are looking into whether vitamin D can be used as a marker to understand how active inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is in patients.
  • The study included 616 patients and found a link between low vitamin D levels and higher signs of inflammation in both types of IBD: ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease.
  • The results suggest that vitamin D could help doctors measure IBD activity better, but more studies are needed to confirm this.

Article Abstract

Background And Aim: A reliable serum biomarker for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) activity is needed. Vitamin D is involved in inflammation and has been demonstrated to be low in IBD patients with active disease. It is routinely measured in IBD patients. Therefore, vitamin D may have a role as a serum biomarker in IBD. This study aims to investigate whether serum vitamin D may be useful as a biomarker in IBD in a real-world IBD population.

Methods: Patients were identified by review of fecal calprotectin (FCP) results, and those who had a clinical review, vitamin D test, and FCP performed within 3 months were included. Clinical scores were calculated from chart review. Nonparametric tests were used to investigate vitamin D and FCP levels, serum biomarkers, and clinical scores.

Results: Of 616 patients identified, 325 episodes of matched vitamin D level and biomarker data were obtained. A statistically significant correlation was found between vitamin D levels and FCP levels for all patients ( = -0.19 [ -0.29 to -0.080],  < 0.001]. This remained true when patients were divided into IBD subsets. Low vitamin D was associated with partial Mayo scores and C-reactive protein (CRP) to albumin ratio in ulcerative colitis, and CRP and CRP/albumin ratio in Crohn's disease.

Conclusion: Vitamin D level is negatively correlated with FCP and it may be considered as an adjunct biomarker at this stage. A prospective study would be beneficial to investigate further correlations between vitamin D and existing biomarkers of inflammation in IBD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10757496PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jgh3.13010DOI Listing

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