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Annals of intensive care · Jan 2014
Vitamin D deficiency and risk of acute lung injury in severe sepsis and severe trauma: a case-control study.
- Nicolas Barnett, Zhiguo Zhao, Tatsuki Koyama, David R Janz, Chen-Yu Wang, Addison K May, Gordon R Bernard, and Lorraine B Ware.
- Division of Allergy, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine in the Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, T1218 MCN, 1161 21st Avenue South, Nashville, TN, USA. Lorraine.ware@vanderbilt.edu.
- Ann Intensive Care. 2014 Jan 1;4(1):5.
BackgroundThe aim of this study was to determine the association between 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) levels at the onset of critical illness and the development of acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS) in patients with sepsis or trauma.MethodsWe performed two nested case-control studies of 478 patients with sepsis and trauma with or without ALI/ARDS admitted to the medical, surgical and trauma ICUs of a tertiary-care center. Cases consisted of patients with either sepsis or trauma and ALI/ARDS; controls consisted of equivalent numbers of matched patients with either sepsis or trauma alone. We measured serum 25-OHD levels the morning after ICU admission and used multivariable regression to assess the relationship between 25-OHD and diagnosis of ALI/ARDS during the first four ICU days, controlling for age, gender, diabetes, smoking status and season.Results25-OHD levels did not differ between cases with ALI/ARDS and controls in either the sepsis or trauma cohorts. Using a conditional logistic regression model, sepsis patients during the winter season with higher 25-OHD levels were more likely to develop acute lung injury (odds ratio 1.68, 95% confidence interval of 1.05 to 2.69, P = 0.03). This association did not hold for the trauma cohort in either season. Sepsis and trauma patients had a lower risk of hospital mortality at higher 25-OHD levels but neither relationship reached significance. Higher one-year mortality after trauma was associated with lower 25-OHD levels (HR 0.50, CI 0.35,0.72 P = 0.001).ConclusionsSerum 25-OHD measured early after admission to intensive care is not associated with the development of acute lung injury, hospital or one-year mortality in critically ill patients with sepsis although lower 25-OHD levels were associated with higher one-year mortality in patients with severe trauma.
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