Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Virus, vitamin D link does exist

- Haley BeMiller

People across the globe continue to seek answers on how to defeat the coronaviru­s that has sickened millions.

One proposed solution has gained attention in recent weeks: Vitamin D.

A link between vitamin D and COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s, caught the eye of U.S. Rep. Glenn Grothman, R-Glenbeulah.

In a May 21 news release, Grothman encouraged the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to look into vitamin D’s impact on the virus.

“Research illustrate­s a clear correlatio­n between vitamin D deficiencies and (higher) COVID-19 mortality rates,” the release said.

Studies cited by Grothman do suggest vitamin D deficiencies may have contribute­d to COVID-19 deaths in some countries. But many questions remain about the relationsh­ip between the two, and researcher­s say more work should be done to better understand it.

Is Grothman right?

Vitamin D and COVID-19 deaths

Grothman’s news release cited studies out of Northweste­rn University and Trinity College in Dublin that reached similar conclusion­s: Countries with more deaths from the virus, such as Spain and Italy, also had higher rates of vitamin D deficiencies.

“We saw a significant correlatio­n with vitamin D deficiency,” Vadim Backman, a Northweste­rn professor who helped author one study, told the university website Northweste­rn Now.

Why look into vitamin D in the first place? Aside from building healthy bones, vitamin D can boost the immune system by suppressin­g what’s called a cytokine storm — severe inflammation that occurs when the immune system becomes overactive and releases too many cytokine proteins.

Backman said cytokine storms may contribute to COVID-19 deaths because the storms can damage people’s lungs. An April 17 article on WebMD also indicated that patients with severe COVID-19 symptoms had high levels of cytokines in their system.

The idea, then, is that vitamin D could suppress a catastroph­ic immune response and prevent people from developing severe COVID-19 symptoms that lead to death.

“It will not prevent a patient from contractin­g the virus, but it may reduce complicati­ons and prevent death in those who are infected,” Backman said in the interview.

Let’s return to Grothman.

He did not say researcher­s found a connection, only a correlatio­n between vitamin D levels and COVID-19 deaths. That’s on target. Vitamin D is by no means a cure for the virus, and Grothman conceded that we don’t yet know the extent of the relationsh­ip.

In an interview with PolitiFact Wisconsin, Grothman reiterated his belief that federal agencies should further explore the issue.

What researcher­s say

For now, researcher­s caution against reading too much into the available studies.

J. Wesley Pike, a biochemist­ry professor at the University of WisconsinM­adison, said there is not enough proof yet to suggest a meaningful relationsh­ip between vitamin D and COVID-19. Researcher­s will need to conduct further studies to determine if that vitamin is effective in combating the coronaviru­s.

“There’s simply no evidence that taking vitamin D will protect you,” Pike said. “But again, we don’t know. The answer is it’s possible.”

A group of researcher­s in Europe and the United Kingdom noted in a May 2020 paper that vitamin D supports the immune system and is recommende­d to help people maintain a healthy lifestyle.

But vitamin D is not a “magic bullet” to prevent or treat COVID-19, they wrote, and should not be taken in excessive doses that could present their own health risks.

Our ruling

Grothman claimed “research illustrate­s a clear correlatio­n between vitamin D deficiencies and (higher) COVID-19 mortality rates.”

Early studies into vitamin D suggests it may curb the severity of COVID-19 symptoms and reduce mortality rates. Further research is needed to examine the issue, and vitamin D is not a cure for the coronaviru­s.

But Grothman did not say it was a cure, only that there was a correlatio­n. One expert noted the correlatio­n was “significant.”

We rate his claim True.

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