Progression of diabetic nephropathy and vitamin D serum levels: A pooled analysis of 7722 patients

Author:

Dean Yomna E.1ORCID,Elawady Sameh Samir2,Shi Wangpan3,Salem Ahmed A.4,Chotwatanapong Arinnan5,Ashraf Haya4,Reddi Tharun6,Dundi Prashant Obed Reddy7,Habash Waleed Yasser8,Habash Mohamed Yasser9,Ahmed Safaa4,Samir Hana M.4,Elsayed Ahmed4,Arora Aryan10,Arora Abhinav10,Elsayed Abdelrahman11,Mady Tamer12,Tanas Yousef1,Hazimeh Yusef1314ORCID,Alazmy Mohamed15,Aiash Hani416

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine Alexandria University Alexandria Egypt

2. Neuro‐endovascular Surgery Department Medical University of South Carolina Charleston South Carolina USA

3. Faculty of Medicine Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand

4. Faculty of Medicine Suez Canal University Ismailia Egypt

5. Faculty of Dentistry Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand

6. Arkansas College of Osteopathic Medicine Fort Smith Arkansas USA

7. Karnataka Institute of Medical Sciences Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences Bengaluru India

8. New Giza University Giza Egypt

9. Faculty of Medicine Kasr Al‐Ainy, Cairo University Cairo Egypt

10. Syracuse University Syracuse New York USA

11. College of Medicine Royal College of Surgeons Dublin Ireland

12. International American University, College of Medicine Vieux Fort Saint Lucia

13. Lebanese University Beirut Lebanon

14. Zahraa Hospital, University Medical Center Beirut Lebanon

15. Medical director, Dhaman Health Assurance Company Kuwait Kuwait

16. SUNY Upstate Medical University Syracuse New York USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground and AimLow serum Vitamin D levels have been associated with diabetic nephropathy (DN). Our study aimed to analyse the serum levels of vitamin D in patients suffering from DN and the subsequent changes in serum vitamin D levels as the disease progresses.MethodsPubMed, Embase, SCOPUS and Web of Science were searched using keywords such as ‘25 hydroxyvitamin D’ and ‘diabetic nephropathy’. We included observational studies that reported the association between the serum 25 hydroxy vitamin D levels and diabetic nephropathy without restriction to age, gender, and location. R Version 4.1.2 was used to perform the meta‐analysis. The continuous outcomes were represented as mean difference (MD) and standard deviation (SD) and dichotomous outcomes as risk ratios (RR) with their 95% confidence interval (CI).ResultsTwenty‐three studies were included in our analysis with 7722 patients. Our analysis revealed that vitamin D was significantly lower in diabetic patients with nephropathy than those without nephropathy (MD: −4.32, 95% CI: 7.91–0.74, p‐value = .0228). On comparing diabetic patients suffering from normoalbuminuria, microalbuminuria, or macroalbuminuria, we found a significant difference in serum vitamin D levels across different groups. Normoalbuminuria versus microalbuminuria showed a MD of −1.69 (95% CI: −2.28 to −1.10, p‐value = .0002), while microalbuminuria versus macroalbuminuria showed a MD of (3.75, 95% CI: 1.43–6.06, p‐value = .0058), proving that serum vitamin D levels keep declining as the disease progresses. Notwithstanding, we detected an insignificant association between Grade 4 and Grade 5 DN (MD: 2.29, 95% CI: −2.69–7.28, p‐value = .1862).ConclusionSerum Vitamin D levels are lower among DN patients and keep declining as the disease progresses, suggesting its potential benefit as a prognostic marker. However, on reaching the macroalbuminuria stage (Grades 4 and 5), vitamin D is no longer a discriminating factor.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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