key: cord-0837298-qpqise0k authors: Annweiler, Cédric; Beaudenon, Mélinda; Simon, Romain; Guenet, Mialy; Otekpo, Marie; Célarier, Thomas; Gautier, Jennifer title: Vitamin D supplementation prior to or during COVID-19 associated with better 3-month survival in geriatric patients: Extension phase of the GERIA-COVID study date: 2021-07-29 journal: J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol DOI: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2021.105958 sha: 6de53069b1f6b640bd1d462e238fce4cf73bd455 doc_id: 837298 cord_uid: qpqise0k BACKGROUND: The objective of this extension phase of the quasi-experimental GERIA-COVID study was to determine whether vitamin D3 supplementation taken prior to or during COVID-19 was associated with better 3-month survival in geriatric patients hospitalized for COVID-19. METHODS: Intervention group was defined as all participants supplemented with vitamin D3 prior to or during COVID-19 (n = 67). Supplements were either bolus vitamin D3 (ie, 50,000IU per month, or 80,000IU or 100,000IU or 200,000IU every 2-3 months), or daily supplementation with 800IU. Comparator group involved those without vitamin D supplements (n = 28). Outcome was 3-month mortality. Covariables were age, sex, functional abilities, history of malignancies, cardiomyopathy, undernutrition, number of acute health issues, antibiotics use, systemic corticosteroids use, and 25(OH)D concentration. RESULTS: 76.1% (n = 51) of participants survived at 3 months in Intervention group, compared to only 53.6% (n = 15) in Comparator group (P = 0.03). The fully-adjusted hazard ratio for 3-month mortality was HR = 0.23[95%CI:0.09;0.58](P = 0.002) in Intervention group compared to Comparator group. Intervention group had also longer survival time (log-rank P = 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: Vitamin D3 supplementation was associated with better 3-month survival in older COVID-19 patients. The COVID-19 caused by SARS-CoV-2 spreads worldwide, affecting millions of people and causing hundreds of thousands deaths, notably in older adults. With the lack of effective therapy and the emergence of immune-escape variants (1), the search for a treatment in parallel with the vaccine efforts remains crucial and focusing on the repurposing of existing drugs gives hope of curbing the pandemic. Importantly, an in-silico study has identified vitamin D among the three molecules most likely to attenuate the effects of COVID-19 through its effects on gene expression (2) . Consistently, we previously reported in a quasiexperimental study among frail elderly hospitalized for COVID-19 that the use of vitamin D3 supplements was associated with less severe COVID-19 and better survival at day 14 (3) . Such follow-up made it possible to include the mortality risk linked to the cytokine storm generally occurring between 7 and 10 days of the SARS-CoV-2 infection (1) . However, recent data shows that COVID-19 may also have medium and long-term consequences on morbidity and mortality that go beyond the acute stage of the infection (4) . In this perspective, finding a treatment capable of improving the vital prognosis in the short but also in the longer term appears crucial. We had the opportunity to follow the GERIA-COVID participants beyond their hospitalization for up to 3 months. Since bolus vitamin D3 supplementation improves vitamin D status for weeks (5) and given the short-term improvement in survival observed in COVID-19 patients under vitamin D3 supplementation (3,6), we hypothesized that vitamin D3 supplementation could be effective in improving 3-month survival in geriatric patients with COVID-19. The main objective of this extension phase of the quasiexperimental GERIA-COVID study was to determine whether vitamin D3 supplementation J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f taken either prior to or during COVID-19 was associated with better 3-month survival among geriatric COVID-19 patients. We studied all consecutive participants enrolled during the first wave of the pandemic (between March and June 2020) in the quasi-experimental GERIA-COVID study within the geriatric acute care unit of the University Hospital of Angers, France (3) . A first analysis of 14-day mortality was previously published on a subsample of this cohort (the patients included between March and May 2020, at the time of writing the first report)(3). Inclusion criteria for the present analysis were as follows: 1) COVID-19 diagnosed with RT-PCR and/or chest CT-scan; 2) data available on the serum measures and on the usual treatments; 3) vital status available 3 months after the diagnosis of COVID-19. Ninety-seven patients with COVID-19 were consecutively admitted into the unit during the study period and recruited in the GERIA-COVID study. Among them, 2 participants had missing values of serum albumin and 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations. Finally, 95 participants were included in the present analysis. The Intervention group was defined as all COVID-19 participants who had orally received vitamin D3 supplements either prior to hospitalization (systematically noted from the primary care physicians' prescriptions and/or sought by questioning the patients and their relatives) and/or during hospitalization and/or at hospital discharge. Bolus included either 50,000 IU vitamin D3 per month, or 80,000 IU or 100,000 IU or 200,000 IU vitamin D3 every 2-3 months. One patient was supplemented with 800 IU vitamin D3 per day. None received D2 or intramuscular supplements. The Comparator group was defined as all COVID-19 participants who had not received any vitamin D supplements prior to or following the diagnosis of COVID-19; the absence of vitamin D treatment being mostly explained by the patients' refusal to be supplemented. The primary outcome was the 3-month all-cause mortality. Follow-up started from the day of COVID-19 diagnosis for each patient and continued for 3 months or until death when applicable. Vital status was recovered by contacting the patients and their relatives by telephone, and by monitoring the National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies (INSEE) register (https://www.insee.fr/fr/information/4190491). Potential confounders were age, sex, functioning, severe undernutrition, history of malignancies, cardiomyopathy, number of acute health issues on hospital admission, hospital use of antibiotics, of systemic corticosteroids, and serum 25(OH)D concentration at the time of COVID-19 diagnosis. Functioning prior to COVID-19 was measured from 1 (worst) to 6 (best) with the Iso-Resources Groups (GIR) (7) . Serum albumin and 25(OH)D concentrations were measured concomitantly with the diagnosis of COVID-19. Severe undernutrition was defined as albumin < 30g/L. Serum 25(OH)D concentration was measured by immunoanalysis on the automated LIAISON platform (DiaSorin Inc., Saluggia, IT) in nmol/L (to convert to ng/mL, divide by 2.496). Acute health issues were defined as diseases with sudden onset and rapid progression, whatever their nature or site (3). History of hematological and solid malignancies and of cardiomyopathy was noted from the medical register, and by interviewing patients, family physicians and relatives. The use of systemic corticosteroids J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f and/or antibiotics (i.e., quinolones, beta-lactams, sulfonamides, macrolides, lincosamides, aminoglycosides, among others) was noted from prescriptions during hospitalization. Participants' characteristics were appropriately summarized using means and standard deviations (SD) or numbers and percentages. Firstly, comparisons according to the study groups (i.e., Intervention versus Comparator) were performed using Student t test or Chisquare test, as appropriate. Secondly, a partially-adjusted (accounting for age, gender, GIR score and 25(OH)D concentration) and a full adjusted Cox regression were used to examine the associations of 3-month mortality (dependent variable) with vitamin D3 supplementation and covariables (independent variables). Finally, the elapsed time to death was studied by survival curves according to Kaplan-Meier method and compared by log-rank test. P-values <0.05 were considered significant. All statistics were performed using SAS® version 9.4 software (Sas Institute Inc) and R (R core Team, 2018). The study was conducted in accordance with the ethical standards set forth in the Helsinki Declaration (1983) . No participant or relatives objected to the use of anonymized clinical and biological data for research purposes. Ethics approval was obtained from the Ethics Board of the University Hospital of Angers, France (2020/100). The study protocol was also registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04560608) and declared to the French National Commission for Information Technology and civil Liberties (CNIL; ar20-0087v0) and. J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f Ninety-five participants (mean±SD, 88.0±5.5 years; 48.4% women) were included in this quasi-experimental study. The follow-up was complete for all participants. Sixty-six participants survived COVID-19 at 3 months while 29 died. Table 1 indicates the participants' characteristics in the Intervention (n=67) and Comparator groups (n=28). The two groups were similar at baseline, except for the proportions of women and of history of malignancies ( Table 1 ). The 3-month mortality was lower in the Intervention group compared to the Comparator group (respectively, 23.9% versus 46.4%, P=0.030). Figure 1 ). The present quasi-experimental study in geriatric patients with COVID-19 found that, irrespective of all measured potential confounders, vitamin D3 supplementation was associated with better survival after 3 months. This result is consistent with observational data collected during the pandemic showing that vitamin D status is associated with COVID-19 outcomes; cases with COVID-19 and hypovitaminosis D being more likely to experience severe forms of COVID-19 (8) , to require non-invasive ventilation (9) , to have prolonged hospital stay (10) , and to die from COVID-19 (8) . Overall, these results suggest that improving vitamin D status may prevent How vitamin D supplementation improves COVID-19 outcomes is not fully elucidated (16, 17) . First, vitamin D modulates the renin-angiotensin system, notably the angiotensin-2 converting enzyme (ACE2) (18) , the expression of which is downregulated by the SARS- CoV-2 (19) with potential consequences on inflammatory chain reaction (i.e., cytokine storm) complicated by acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (1) . A study in rats with chemically-induced ARDS showed that levels of ACE2 mRNA and proteins were increased following vitamin D administration, and ARDS symptoms and lung damages were milder under vitamin D compared to controls (20) . Second, vitamin D exerts antiviral effects both by induction of antimicrobial peptides with direct antiviral activity and by immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effects (21) . These are important to limit the cytokine storm by reducing the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines by T helper 1 cells (Th1), such as Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha (TNF-α) and interferon-γ (21) , and by increasing the expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines by macrophages (21) . This may explain why the prevention of mortality in the vitamin D group was most apparent in the first 14 days of the disease ( Figure 1 ), which corresponds to the cytokine storm when inflammatory lung damage is most severe. Our study confirms the slowing of deaths beyond this period in the non-supplemented group and reports a similar evolution of the death curve in the vitamin D group, which is crucial in the perspective of increased use of vitamin D supplements during COVID-19. Third, vitamin D may have beneficial effects over time on comorbidities that are risk factors for severe forms of COVID-19, such as malignancies, diabetes mellitus, high blood pressure, chronic cardiovascular and respiratory diseases for example (5) . Compared to daily doses, bolus doses have the additional merit of being preferred by patients (23) and of improving treatment adherence in older adults (24) . We also found that increased 25(OH)D concentrations at the time of COVID-19 diagnosis were associated with lower 3-month mortality ( Table 2) Several limitations also existed. First, participants were restricted to a limited number of geriatric patients who might be unrepresentative of all older adults. Second, although we were able to control for important characteristics that could modify the association, residual potential confounders might still be present, such as the 25(OH)D concentration ultimately reached following supplementation or the date of the most recent vitamin D intake. A J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f supplement taken in the month preceding the infection seems however to be more protective than an earlier supplementation (6). Third, the quasi-experimental design of our study is less robust than a randomized controlled trial. Participants in the Comparator group did not receive vitamin D placebo and there was no randomization. It is plausible that patients refused taking vitamin D supplementation in the Comparator group due to comorbidities such as malignancies that were too severe to take the supplements. It should yet be noted that most characteristics did not differ between the two groups, except for the history of malignancies and the proportion of women (who are likely to suffer from osteoporosis and may have received corresponding treatment that includes vitamin D). In conclusion, we found that vitamin D3 supplementation prior to or during COVID-19 was associated with better survival after 3 months in older adults with COVID-19. Vitamin D supplementation may represent an effective, accessible, and well-tolerated adjuvant treatment for COVID-19. CA occasionally serves as a consultant for Mylan Laboratories. All authors declare they do not have any other financial and personal conflicts of interest with this manuscript. None. CA occasionally serves as a consultant for Mylan Laboratories Inc (2020). All authors declare they do not have any other financial and personal conflicts of interest with this manuscript. 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VDR Attenuates Acute Lung Injury by Blocking Ang-2 Tie-2 Pathway and Renin-Angiotensin System Replication-Dependent Downregulation of Cellular Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme 2 Protein Expression by Human Coronavirus NL63 Effect of Vitamin D on ACE2 and Vitamin D receptor expression in rats with LPS-induced acute lung injury Vitamin D and immune regulation: anti-bacterial, antiviral, and anti-inflammatory Vitamin D supplementation to prevent acute respiratory tract infections: systematic review and meta-analysis of individual participant data A phase IV, two-armed, randomized, crossover study comparing compliance with once-a-month administration of vitamin D3 to compliance with daily administration of a fixed-dose combination of vitamin D3 and calcium during two 6-month periods Vitamin D in adults: update on testing and supplementation CI: confidence interval; COVID-19: coronavirus disease 2019; GIR: Iso Resource Groups; HR: hazard ratio; *: adjusted for age, sex, GIR score and 25(OH)D concentration; †: serum albumin concentration < 30 g/L; ‡: quinolones, betalactams, sulfonamides, macrolides, lincosamides, aminoglycosides The authors have listed everyone who contributed significantly to the work in the Acknowledgments section. Permission has been obtained from all persons named in the Acknowledgments section. There was no compensation for this contribution.