Scimex: Two Australian experts say there's a danger that over-testing for
vitamin D deficiencies may lead to lots of people with low vitamin D
levels receiving unnecessary treatment. The researchers say that recent
studies suggest there's no clear evidence for the benefits of vitamin D,
so testing patients may be completely unnecessary. Over-testing for vitamin D deficiencies may lead to a sizable group of
patients with low vitamin D levels receiving unnecessary treatment
without clear evidence of benefit, including unneeded repeat testing,
according to a Perspective published in the Medical Journal of
Australia.
Controversies remain about who should be tested and who should be
treated for vitamin D deficiency, wrote Dr Paul Glendenning from Royal
Perth Hospital and Dr Gerard Tse-Jiun Chew from the University of
Western Australia.
"The correction of vitamin D deficiency and assurance of adequate
calcium intake have been cornerstones of osteoporosis management", they
wrote.
However, a recent meta-analysis of clinical trials concluded that
"vitamin D supplementation alone did not reduce total or hip fracture
risk, but co-supplementation with vitamin D and calcium did".
Even more controversial is the role of vitamin D in extraskeletal
diseases such as cancer, atherosclerosis,diabetes, infections and
neurodegenerative diseases, with evidence clouded by possible
methodological biases and confounding.
"Current evidence suggests that the main beneficial effects of vitamin D
supplementation relate to musculoskeletal, rather than extraskeletal,
health outcomes, with the subset of frail older patients with the
highest likelihood of vitamin D deficiency being those most likely to
benefit", Glendenning and Chew wrote.
Despite these controversies, there has a been a 94-fold increase in
vitamin D testing between 2000 and 2010 in Australia, with repeat
testing accounting for nearly half the test numbers, "despite only a
0.5-fold increase in bone mineral density testing over the same period".
Guidelines for vitamin D testing from the Royal College of Pathologists
of Australasia (RCPA), released in 2013, specify that "the routine
screening of healthy adults is not recommended, with the caution that
doing so might reveal a significantly sizeable group with low vitamin D
levels that could lead to treatment without clear evidence of benefit
and perpetuate unnecessary repeat testing". Additionally, repeat testing
should occur no earlier than 3 months after the start of
supplementation or change in dose.
Glendenning and Chew suggested education initiatives to "increase
general awareness and appreciation of the current evidence and
guidelines for appropriate testing and supplementation", followed by an
audit of local practice.