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Effects of vitamin D on cardiac function in patients with chronic HF: the VINDICATE study

Version 4 2024-03-12, 15:12
Version 3 2023-10-29, 11:37
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 15:12 authored by K. K. Witte, R. Byrom, J. P. Greenwood, S Plein, Graham Law, S. Pavitt, J. H. Barth, R. M. Cubbon, M. T. Kearney, J. Gierula, M. F. Paton, H. A. Jamil, J. E. Lowry, R. G. Gillott, S. A. Barnes, H. Chumun, L. C. Kearney
<p>Background: patients with chronic heart failure (HF) secondary to left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD) are frequently deficient in vitamin D. Low vitamin D levels are associated with a worse prognosis. Objectives: the VINDICATE (VitamIN D treatIng patients with Chronic heArT failurE) study was undertaken to establish safety and efficacy of high-dose 25 (OH) vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol) supplementation in patients with chronic HF due to LVSD. Methods: we enrolled 229 patients (179 men) with chronic HF due to LVSD and vitamin D deficiency (cholecalciferol <50 nmol/l {\ensuremath{<}}20 ng/ml). Participants were allocated to 1 year of vitamin D3 supplementation (4,000 IU 100 {\ensuremath{\mu}}g daily) or matching non?calcium-based placebo. The primary endpoint was change in 6-minute walk distance between baseline and 12 months. Secondary endpoints included change in LV ejection fraction at 1 year, and safety measures of renal function and serum calcium concentration assessed every 3 months. Results: one year of high-dose vitamin D3 supplementation did not improve 6-min walk distance at 1 year, but was associated with a significant improvement in cardiac function (LV ejection fraction +6.07\% 95\% confidence interval (CI): 3.20 to 8.95; p {\ensuremath{<}} 0.0001); and a reversal of LV remodeling (LV end diastolic diameter -2.49 mm 95\% CI: -4.09 to -0.90; p = 0.002 and LV end systolic diameter -2.09 mm 95\% CI: -4.11 to -0.06 p = 0.043). Conclusions: one year of 100 {\ensuremath{\mu}}g daily vitamin D3 supplementation does not improve 6-min walk distance but has beneficial effects on LV structure and function in patients on contemporary optimal medical therapy. Further studies are necessary to determine whether these translate to improvements in outcomes.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Health and Social Care (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of the American College of Cardiology

Volume

67

Issue

22

Pages/Article Number

2593-2603

Publisher

Elsevier for American College of Cardiology

ISSN

0735-1097

Date Submitted

2017-04-20

Date Accepted

2016-03-21

Date of First Publication

2016-04-04

Date of Final Publication

2016-06-07

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-04-20

ePrints ID

26604

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