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High-dose vitamin D tied to increased fall risk among older women

Women aged 70 or older who received a single annual high dose of vitamin D had a higher rate of falls and fractures compared to women who received placebo.

High-dose vitamin D tied to increased fall risk among older women

Older women receiving an annual large dose of vitamin D may have an increased risk of falls and fractures, says a new study.

According to the research in the May 12 issue of JAMA, women aged 70 years or older who received a single annual high dose of vitamin D had a higher rate of falls and fractures compared to women who received placebo.

The results of studies investigating the effects of cholecalciferol (vitamin D) supplementation on falls and fractures have been incon­sistent, with some meta-analyses indicating a reduced fracture risk, while others have concluded that vitamin D supplementation is ineffective, or may in­crease the risk of fracture.

For individuals attempting to modify their risk of falls or fractures via vitamin D, adherence to daily supplementation is typically poor, according to background information in the article.

Kerrie M. Sanders, Ph.D., of the University of Melbourne, Geelong, Australia and colleagues conducted a study to examine whether high-dose cho­lecalciferol (500,000 IU) given orally once a year to older women would reduce falls and fractures.

The vitamin D was given in a single, high-dose to address low adherence and to be a prac­tical intervention easily translated to clinical practice.

The trial included 2,256 community-dwelling women, ages 70 years or older, considered to be at high risk of fracture, who were recruited from June 2003 to June 2005 and were randomly assigned to receive 500,000 IU of cholecalciferol or placebo each autumn to winter for 3 to 5 years. The study concluded in 2008.

The trial participants had a total of 5,404 falls over the study period, with 74% of 837 women in the vitamin D group and 68% of 769 women in the placebo group having at least 1 fall.

Analysis indicated women in the annual high-dose vitamin D group experienced 15% more falls. Women in the vitamin D group had 171 fractures vs. 135 in the placebo group, with 26% more fractures for participants in the vitamin D group, who also had a 31% higher incidence of falls in the first 3 months following dosing.

"This is the first study to demon­strate increased risk of falls associated with any vitamin D intervention and the second study to demonstrate an in­creased fracture risk associated with annual high-dose vitamin D therapy in elderly women.

Our study used the largest total annual dose of vitamin D (500,000 IU) reported in any large ran­domized controlled trial, raising the possibility that the adverse outcome is dose-related.

The opposing outcomes of 2 studies that used the same total annual dose (300,000 IU intramuscularly) suggest that the dosing regimen (i.e., 4 monthly vs. annually) rather than the total dose might determine the out­come," the authors write.

"This line of reasoning is sup­ported by the temporal risk pattern that we observed and the fact that harm has not been reported in the numerous studies that have used more frequent dosing. Thus, it is reasonable to specu­late that high serum levels of vitamin D or metabolites resulting from the large annual dose, subsequent de­crease in the levels, or both might be causal.

Furthermore, because the lev­els of 25-hydroxycholecalciferol dem­onstrated in this study could occur with other recommended dosing regi­mens, the outcome of this study sug­gests that safety of high-dose vitamin D supplementation warrants further study."

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