Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Review
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Vitamin D deficiency in HIV: a shadow on long-term management?

Vitamin D deficiency in HIV infection has attracted much interest. The best known clinical outcomes of vitamin D deficiency are rickets (children) and osteomalacia (adults). Several non-skeletal disorders have also been linked to suboptimal vitamin D levels in the general population. The prevalence of vitamin D deficiency varies widely (6-100%) across diverse patient populations, with no evidence that it is higher in HIV-positive versus noninfected adults. Vitamin D deficiency may blunt immune restoration and exacerbate HIV complications (e.g. opportunistic infections, poor perinatal outcomes, wasting, HIV disease progression, AIDS events, and death). The nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor efavirenz was associated with a relatively high risk of vitamin D deficiency; nevirapine, etravirine, and rilpivirine were noted to have less or no impact on vitamin D versus efavirenz in the limited data available. Protease inhibitors have either no or a low association with vitamin D deficiency. Nucleoside/nucleotide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (with the possible exception of zidovudine) also did not appear to be associated with vitamin D deficiency. Management of vitamin D deficiency in HIV-positive adults has not been rigorously evaluated; some guidelines recommend more vitamin D supplementation for HIV-positive adults on antiretrovirals versus the general population (e.g. 2-3 times higher vitamin D daily intake for the age group; loading dose up to 10,000 IU/day for 8-10 weeks and a maintenance dose of 800-2,000 IU/day). In conclusion, although vitamin D deficiency in HIV-positive adults can be prevalent, current evidence for its causes and impact is relatively weak. More data, particularly from large, controlled, long-term trials, regarding the benefits of correcting vitamin D levels in HIV-positive adults are needed.

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