Vitamin D supplementation and falls: a trial sequential meta-analysis.

Categoría Revisión sistemática
RevistaThe lancet. Diabetes & endocrinology
Año 2014

Este artículo está incluido en 1 Síntesis amplia 19 Síntesis amplias (1 referencia)

Este artículo incluye 19 Estudios primarios 19 Estudios primarios (19 referencias)

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BACKGROUND:

Vitamin D supplementation is often recommended to prevent falls, although vitamin D trials and meta-analyses of these trials have reported conflicting results for this outcome. We aimed to assess if there was a need for further research.

METHODS:

We explored the value of doing further randomised controlled trials assessing the effects of vitamin D supplements on falls with trial sequential analysis with a risk reduction threshold of 15%. All analyses were done using the numbers of participants who had a fall in intention-to-treat analyses. Trial sequential analysis performs a cumulative meta-analysis, but reduces the risk of false-positive results from repetitive statistical testing by maintaining the overall risk of type 1 error at 5%.

FINDINGS:

In 20 existing randomised controlled trials (n=29,535), the effect estimate for vitamin D with or without calcium on falls lay within the futility boundary, providing evidence that vitamin D supplementation does not alter the relative risk by 15% or more. In a sensitivity analysis using a risk reduction threshold of 10%, the effect estimate also lay within the futility boundary. In subgroup analyses using a risk reduction threshold of 15%, the effect estimate also lay within the futility boundary for trials of vitamin D supplementation (16 trials, n=22,291) and trials of vitamin D with calcium (six trials, n=9919).

INTERPRETATION:

In pooled analyses, supplementation with vitamin D, with or without calcium, does not reduce falls by 15% or more. Future trials with similar designs are unlikely to alter these conclusions. At present, there is little justification for prescribing vitamin D supplements to prevent falls.

FUNDING:

Health Research Council of New Zealand.
Epistemonikos ID: eeafe92226c2a0daca822c974f9960be8d85233b
First added on: Aug 25, 2014