Vitamin D and Ocular Diseases: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Metabolism of Vitamin D
3. Vitamin D and Ocular Diseases
3.1. Method of Literature Search
3.1.1. Search Strategy
3.1.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
3.1.3. Risk of Bias Assessment
3.2. Myopia
3.3. Age-Related Macular Degeneration
3.4. Glaucoma
3.5. Diabetic Retinopathy
3.6. Dry Eye Syndrome
3.7. Thyroid Eye Diseases
3.8. Uveitis
3.9. Retinoblastoma
3.10. Cataract
3.11. Other Ocular Diseases
First Author | Years | Country | Disease | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gonul Karatas Durusoy [284] | 2020 | Turkey | VKC | Case-control study | 46 VKC patients and 40 healthy controls | Children with VKC has a lower serum 25(OH)D3 levels when compared with healthy controls. | 4b |
Anna Maria Zicari [286] | 2016 | Italy | VKC | Prospective | 47 VKC patients and 63 healthy controls | Children with VKC has a lower serum 25(OH)D3 levels when compared with healthy controls. And the vitamin D level was significantly correlated with the severity. | 3b |
Banu Bozkurt [285] | 2016 | Turkey | VKC | Case-control study | 29 VKC patients and 62 healthy controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels in VKC children was significantly lower than those healthy control. 48.3% of VKC children and 22.6% healthy children were found to have severe vitamin D deficiency. | 4b |
Rana Sorkhabi [287] | 2021 | Iran | VKC | Case-control study | 39 VKC patients and 32 healthy controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels in VKC patients were significantly lower than healthy controls. A statically insignificant reverse correlation of the serum vitamin D levels and the severity were found. | 4a |
Daniele Giovanni Ghiglioni [313] | 2019 | Italy | VKC | Prospective | 71 VKC patients (mixed, 46; tarsal, 19; and limbal, 6) | There was a significant different in serum 25(OH)D3 levels in children with limbal VKC and tarsal VKC. The ocular treatment with immunomodulator eye drops allow the improvement in serum 25(OH)D3 levels. | 3b |
Mehmet Gökhan Aslan [288] | 2021 | Italy | KCN | Case-control study | 28 progressive KCN patients, 27 nonprogressive KCN patients and 30 healthy controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels in KCN were significantly lower than healthy controls. Decreased vitamin D levels significantly increased nonprogressive KCN and progressive KCN probability 1.23 and 1.29 times, respectively. | 4a |
Serkan Akkaya [289] | 2020 | Turkey | KCN | Case-control study | 100 KCN patients and 100 healthy controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were significantly lower in KCN group than healthy control group, but no significant difference in the distribution of vitamin D levels among KCN groups of different severity. | 4a |
Siamak Zarei-Ghanavati [290] | 2020 | Iran | KCN | Cross-sectional | 100 KCN patients and 100 healthy controls | A lower serum 25(OH)D3 level was found in the KCN group compared to the control group, but insignificant differences were found among different KCN stage groups. | 4a |
Sevil Bilir Goksugur [296] | 2015 | Turkey | ARC | Case-control study | 22 ARC patients and 31 healthy controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were associated with ARC in children. | 4a |
Alper Yenign [298] | 2015 | Turkey | ARC | Prospective cross-sectional study | 42 ARC patients and 35 healthy controls | Plasma 25(OH)D3 levels in ARC patients were significantly lower than the control group. | 4a |
Zeynep Dadaci [299] | 2014 | Turkey | Seasonal ARC | Case-control study | 49 seasonal ARC patients and 44 healthy controls | Plasma 25(OH)D3 levels of seasonal ARC were significantly lower than control group. | 4a |
Farhan Khashim Alswailmi [297] | 2021 | Saudi Arabi | Seasonal ARC | Cross-sectional case-control study | 26 seasonal ARC patients and 26 healthy controls | Mean vitamin D level was significantly higher in seasonal ARC patients. Higher serum vitamin D levels may be linked with seasonal ARC. | 4b |
Lin Chen [314] | 2014 | China | Chalazia | Prospective case-control study | 88 chalazia patients and 72 healthy controls | No significant differences in vitamin D3 | 4b |
Kubra Serefoglu Cabuk [26] | 2020 | Turkey | Blepharospasm | Prospective case-control study | 50 Blepharospasm patients and 22 healthy controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were moderately negatively correlated with Blepharospasm severity (Jankovic severity score). | 4b |
Emrah Utku Kabatas [315] | 2017 | Turkey | Retinopathy | Prospective | 97 premature infants patients | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were significantly lower in infants with retinopathy of prematurity than those without retinopathy of prematurity. | 3a |
Sedat Arikan [300] | 2020 | Turkey | Spatial contrast | Prospective | 41 VDD patients and 30 without VDD controls | Vitamin D deficiency cause a decrease in contrast sensitivity function. | 3a |
Emrah Ozturk [301] | 2020 | Turkey | Contrast sensitivity | Prospective | 42 VDD patients and 34 normal levels control | VDD had negative effects on contrast sensitivity function and also caused thickness difference in certain segments of retinal layers. | 3a |
Aydemir Gozde Aksoy [302] | 2022 | Turkey | Choroidal thickness | Case-control study | 46 DM with VDD patients, 42 DM with normal vitamin D level patients, and 73 healthy controls | No difference in retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) between three groups. VDD has no effect on the RNFL. However, a positive correlation existed between the macular choroidal thickness (CT) and the vitamin D levels in DM patients with VDD. | 4a |
Esra Vural [303] | 2020 | Turkey | Choroidal thickness | Prospective case-control study | 30 VDD patients and 30 normal level controls | A positive correlation was found between vitamin D levels and subfoveal choroidal thickness and inferior and nasal peripapillary choroidal thickness in all participants. | 4a |
Hasan Oncul [304] | 2020 | Turkey | Choroidal thickness | Prospective case-control study | 65 VDD patients and 60 normal level controls | VDD patients have a thinner choroid and the choroidal thickness increased after vitamin D replacement therapy. | 4a |
Cem Cankaya [305] | 2018 | United States | Corneal endothelial | Case-control study | 58 VDD patients and 40 normal level controls | The mean corneal endothelial cell density and mean hexagonal cell ratio in VDD patients were lower than healthy controls. The mean coefficient of variation in VDD patients were higher than healthy controls. VDD may affect the corneal endothelial layer. | 4a |
Alix Graffe [306] | 2014 | France | Macular thickness | Cross-sectional | 62 patients (17 and 45 with vitamin D insufficiency and sufficiency, respectively) | Vitamin D insufficiency was associated with reduced macular thickness with no patent macular dysfunction. | 4a |
Unal Mutlu [316] | 2016 | Netherlands | Retinal microvascular | Prospective population-based study | 5675 subjects (sample) and 2973 subjects (subsample) | Individuals with lower vitamin D levels were more likely to have retinopathy. Lower vitamin D levels were associated with wider venular calibers. | 3a |
Hatice Daldal [317] | 2021 | Turkey | Ocular findings | Prospective | 98 patients (41, 45 and 12 were vitamin D severe deficient, deficient and insufficient, respectively) | Vitamin D may be related to thinning in macular and nasal of RNFL. | 3a |
Karabulut Mujdat [318] | 2022 | Turkey | Retinal microvascularity | Case-control study | 98 VDD patients and 96 healthy controls | There was a strong negative correlation between the serum vitamin D level and vessel density in the whole image, parafoveal, and perifoveal regions of the deep capillary plexus in the study group (Spearman’s rho = −0.71, p = 0.043; Spearman’s rho = −0.79, p = 0.011; and Spearman’s rho = −0.74, p = 0.032; respectively). | 4a |
4. Perspective
5. Vitamin D and Eye Care
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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First Author | Years | Country | Study Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jin A. Choi [39] | 2014 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 2038 subjects | Individuals with higher concentrations of serum 25(OH)D had lower prevalences of myopia after adjustment for confounding factors (p < 0.001). In multiple linear regression analyses, spherical equivalent was significantly associated with serum 25(OH)D concentration after adjustment for confounding factors (p = 0.002). | 4a |
Jeremy A. Guggenheim [40] | 2014 | UK | Prospective observational study | 3677 subjects | Total vitamin D and D3 were biomarkers for time spent outdoors, however there was no evidence they were independently associated with future myopia. | 3a |
Donald O. Mutti [41] | 2011 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 32 subjects | Adjusted for differences in the intake of dietary variables, myopes appear to have lower average blood levels of vitamin D than non-myopes. | 4b |
J. Willem L. Tideman [42] | 2016 | Netherlands | Cross-sectional study | 2666 subjects | Serum levels of 25(OH)D3 were inversely related to AL, and that low levels increased the risk of myopia. This relationship may be independent from time spent outdoors. | 4a |
Seyhan Yazar [43] | 2014 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | 946 subjects | Myopic participants had significantly lower 25(OH)D3 concentrations. The prevalence of myopia was significantly higher in individuals with vitamin D deficiency compared to the individuals with sufficient levels. | 4a |
Jin-woo Kwon [44] | 2017 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 15,126 subjects | Low serum 25(OH)D3 levels and shorter daily sun exposure time may be independently associated with a high prevalence of myopia in Korean adults. These data suggest a direct role for vitamin D in the development of myopia. | 4a |
Katie M. Williams [45] | 2016 | Europe including Norway, Estonia, United Kingdom, France, Italy, Greece, and Spain | Cross-sectional study | 3168 subjects | No independent associations between myopia and serum vitamin D3 concentrations nor variants in genes associated with vitamin D metabolism were found. No convincing evidence for a direct role of vitamin D in myopia risk. | 4a |
Ina Olmer Specht [46] | 2020 | Denmark | Case-control study | 457 myopic subjects and 1280 emmetropic subjects | No increased odds of myopia in relation to low neonatal 25(OH)D3 levels, and no seasonal variation in myopia risk. | 4a |
Byung J Jung [47] | 2020 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 25,199 subjects | Serum 25(OH)D3 level was inversely associated with myopia in Korean adults. | 4a |
Hung-Da Chou [48] | 2021 | China | Prospective, cross-sectional study | 99 Preterm children | Among preterm children with or without ROP, more time spent outdoors was associated with lower odds of myopia. The serum 25(OH)D3 concentration was not associated with myopia, but a high proportion of the participants had insufficient levels. | 4a |
Gareth Lingham [49] | 2021 | Australia | Multi-generation, longitudinal cohort study | 1260 subjects | Myopia in young adulthood was most strongly associated with recent 25(OH)D3 concentrations, a marker of time spent outdoors. | 3a |
Sang Beom Han [50] | 2019 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 3398 subjects | Lower serum 25(OH)D3 concentration (<9 ng/mL) was associated with increased prevalence of both myopia and high myopia. Serum 25(OH)D3 concentration of ≥9 ng/ml was significantly associated with decreased prevalence of high myopia in participants with near work of ≥3 h/day, although the effect was not significant in myopia and low myopia. | 4a |
Fan Gao [51] | 2021 | China | Cross-sectional study | 186 subjects | Children with a higher level of serum 25(OH)D3 have a lower prevalence of moderate to high myopia. | 4a |
Gareth Lingham [52] | 2019 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | 4112 subjects | Vitamin D levels are unrelated to myopia risk in adults. | 4a |
Ho Sik Hwang [53] | 2018 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 11,703 subjects | Serum 25(OH)D3 level (OR, 0.97 per 1 ng/mL) showed protective effect against high myopia | 4a |
Harb Elise N [54] | 2021 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 4838 subjects | There is nonsignificant correlation between serum vitamin D levels and spherical equivalent refractive errors | 4a |
Didik Wahyudi [55] | 2020 | Indonesia | Non-randomised pre-post study | 80 subjects | Vitamin D supplementation and sunlight exposure could increase serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D, decrease myopia, and inhibit the progression of myopia. | 8/12* |
Xiaoman Li [56] | 2022 | China | Cross-sectional study | 294 lowland area children and 89 highland area children | There is no association between serum 25(OH)D concentration and myopia in the 6–14 years old Chinese children. | 4a |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Audrey Cougnard-Grégoire [88] | 2018 | South Korea | Case-control study | 32 Early AMD, 30 late AMD, and 34 normal controls | Serum vitamin D deficiency increases the risk of early AMD with borderline significance [odds ratio (OR) = 3.59; 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.95–13.58; p = 0.060], while significantly associated with a higher risk of late AMD (OR = 3.61; 95%CI 1.04–12.51; p = 0.043). In 2 subgroups of late AMD, serum vitamin D deficiency only increase the risk of patients with subretinal fibrosis (OR = 7.54; 95% CI 1.34–42.51), but not. However, there was no significant association between serum vitamin D deficiency and late AMD without subretinal fibrosis (OR = 1.89; 95% CI 0.40–8.92). | 4a |
Shelley Day [89] | 2017 | Europe (Norway, Estonia, UK, France, Italy, Greece, Spain) | Cross-sectional study | 2209 Early AMD, 150 late AMD and 104 nvAMD | No linear association was found with 25(OH)D and early or late AMD or nvAMD. Deficient status was associated with nvAMD (adjusted OR, 1.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.1–1.45; p < 0.0001), but no association between insufficient or deficient status with early or late AMD. | 4b |
S Golan [91] | 2015 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 913 subjects | For women with vitamin D deficient (<12 ng/mL), there were 6.7-fold increased odds of AMD (95% CI, 1.6–28.2). | 4b |
Alix Graffe [78] | 2019 | United States | Prospective study | 1225 subjects | High 25(OH)D3 concentrations, approximately >70 nM, may be associated with decreased odds of incident early AMD. | 4b |
Rezvan Hashemi [79] | 2017 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 9734 subjects | The adjusted OR (95% CIs) for early AMD among those with adequate (=75 nmol/L) compared to deficient (<30 nmol/L) vitamin D status was 0.94 (0.59–1.50), p-trend = 0.86. Vitamin D status was not associated with early AMD in this cohort sample. | 4b |
Sujit Itty [96] | 2011 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 1313 subjects | Serum 25(OH)D was associated with decreased odds of early AMD in women younger than 75 years and increased odds in women aged 75 years or older (OR for quintile 5 vs. 1, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.29–0.91; p for trend = 0.02 and OR, 1.76; 95% CI, 0.77–4.13; p for trend = 0.05, respectively). High serum 25(OH)D3 concentrations may protect against early AMD in women younger than 75 years. | 4a |
Emrah Kan [80] | 2011 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 100 subjects (50 pairs of siblings) | Comparing among affected and unaffected siblings, serum 25(OH)D levels were not statistically different (p = 0.22). Although evaluation of serum 25(OH)D3 was higher in unaffected individuals than in their affected siblings, but the finding did not reach statistical significance. | 4a |
Eun Chul Kim [94] | 2007 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 7752 subjects | Levels of serum vitamin D were inversely associated with early AMD but not advanced AMD. The odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for early AMD among participants in the highest vs. lowest quintile of serum vitamin D was 0.64 (95% CI, 0.5–0.8; p trend <0.001). | 4a |
Kyoung Lae Kim [81] | 2013 | Denmark | Cross-sectional study | 178 subjects | Across different AMD stages by CARMS, the plasema 25(OH)D levels were comparable. In CARMS 5, the presence of subretinal fibrosis was associated with significantly lower concentrations of 25-hydroxyvitamin D as compared to the absence of subretinal fibrosis (47.2 versus 75.6 nmol/L, p < 0.001). Patients in CARMS 5 with subretinal fibrosis were more likely to have insufficient levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D compared to patients without subretinal fibrosis (p = 0.006) | 4a |
Gareth J.McKay [95] | 2020 | United States | RCT | 25,871 subjects | Neither vitamin D3 nor marine ω-3 fatty acid supplementation had a significant overall effect on AMD incidence or progression. | 4a |
Amy E. Millen [92] | 2017 | France | Prospective cohort study | 2146 subjects | Compared with the highest and lowest quintile of dietary vitamin D intake after adjustment for other confounding facters, there was a lower risk of progression to late AMD and NV (for late AMD: hazard ratio [HR]: 0.60; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.43–0.83; p trend = 0.0007; for NV: HR: 0.59; 95% CI: 0.39–0.89; p trend = 0.005) but not GA (HR: 0.83; 95% CI: 0.53–1.30; p trend = 0.35). When supplement use was considered, the effect was in the protective direction but was not significant. A diet rich in vitamin D may prevent or delay progression to advanced AMD, especially nvAMD. | 4a |
Amy E. Millen [87] | 2016 | Japan | Case-control study | 161 Neovascular AMD patients and 369 healthy controls | Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that low intakes of vitamin D was associated with neovascular AMD (Trend p = 0.002 for vitamin D). High dietary intake of vitamin D is associated with a reduced risk of AMD. | 3a |
Amy E. Millen [90] | 2011 | France | Cross-sectional study | 311 subjects | Low serum 25OHD concentrations were associated with poorer vision acuity. | 4a |
Amy E. Millen [97,98] | 2021 | Turkey | Retrospective study | 114 ARMD and 102 healthy controls | The age-related macular degeneration group had significantly lower vitamin D levels than the control group (p > 0.001). Significantly decreased levels of 25(OH) vitamin D in advanced-stage age-related macular degeneration suggest a significant correlation existing between vitamin D deficiency and age-related macular degeneration development | 4a |
Margaux A. Morrison [76] | 2020 | Egypt | Cross-sectional study | 222 Primary osteoarthritis patients (46 with AMD, 176 without AMD) | Less vitamin D intake were significantly associated with AMD occurrence in primary osteoarthritis patients. | 4b |
Niyati Parekh [93] | 2019 | Italy | RCT | 30 Intermediate AMD | In intermediate AMD, Macuprev® supplementation (contained vitamin D3 800 IU) increases the function of the macular pre-ganglionic elements, with no associated retinal and choroidal ultra-structural changes. | 4a |
Amardeep Singh [82] | 2011 | United States | Case series | 184 Caucasian male twin pairs | Higher dietary intake of vitamin D was present in the twins with less severe AMD (p = 0.01) and smaller drusen size (p = 0.05) compared with co-twins, adjusted for smoking and age | 4b |
William G. Christen [99] | 2015 | France | Cross-sectional study | 91 subjects | Patients with vitamin D deficiency (n = 11) had a reduced mean GCC thickness compared to those without vitamin D deficiency (72.1 ± 7.4 μm versus 77.5 ± 7.5 μm, p = 0.028) | 9/9 * (RoB) |
Bénédicte M. J. Merle [100] | 2022 | Spain | Cross-sectional study | 93 AMD patients and 93 healthy controls | The AMD patients had statistically significant lower 25 (OH)D levels than healthy controls but the median 25(OH)D levels in different stages and subtypes (early, intermediate, advance atrophic and advanced neovascular) were not statistically significant. | 3a |
Aya Aoki [101] | 2018 | South Korea | Case-control study | 32 Early AMD, 30 late AMD, and 34 normal controls | Serum vitamin D deficiency increase the risk of early AMD with borderline significance [odds ratio (OR) = 3.59; 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.95–13.58; p = 0.060], while significantly associated with a higher risk of late AMD (OR = 3.61; 95%CI 1.04–12.51; p = 0.043). In 2 subgroups of late AMD, serum vitamin D deficiency only increase the risk of patients with subretinal fibrosis (OR = 7.54; 95% CI 1.34–42.51), but not. However, there was no significant association between serum vitamin D deficiency and late AMD without subretinal fibrosis (OR = 1.89; 95% CI 0.40–8.92). | 4a |
Olivier Beauchet [102] | 2017 | Europe (Norway, Estonia, UK, France, Italy, Greece, Spain) | Cross-sectional study | 2209 Early AMD, 150 late AMD and 104 nvAMD | No linear association was found with 25(OH)D and early or late AMD or nvAMD. Deficient status was associated with nvAMD (adjusted OR, 1.27; 95% confidence interval, 1.1–1.45; p < 0.0001), but no association between insufficient or deficient status with early or late AMD. | 3a |
Naciye Kabataş [83] | 2015 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 913 subjects | For women with vitamin D deficient (<12 ng/mL), there was 6.7-fold increased odds of AMD (95% CI, 1.6–28.2). | 4a |
Marwa Yahia Mahgoub [86] | 2019 | United States | Prospective study | 1225 subjects | High 25(OH)D3 concentrations, approximately >70 nM, may be associated with decreased odds of incident early AMD. | 4a |
Mariacristina Parravano [103] | 2017 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 9734 subjects | The adjusted OR (95% CIs) for early AMD among those with adequate (=75 nmol/L) compared to deficient (<30 nmol/L) vitamin D status was 0.94 (0.59–1.50), p-trend = 0.86. Vitamin D status was not associated with early AMD in this cohort sample. | 8/9 * (RoB) |
Johanna M Seddon [84] | 2011 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 1313 subjects | Serum 25(OH)D was associated with decreased odds of early AMD in women younger than 75 years and increased odds in women aged 75 years or older (OR for quintile 5 vs. 1, 0.52; 95% CI, 0.29–0.91; p for trend = 0.02 and OR, 1.76; 95% CI, 0.77–4.13; p for trend = 0.05, respectively). High serum 25(OH)D3 concentrations may protect against early AMD in women younger than 75 years. | 4a |
Mathieu Uro [85] | 2011 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 100 subjects (50 pairs of siblings) | Comparing among affected and unaffected siblings, serum 25(OH)D levels were not statistically different (p = 0.22). Although evaluation of serum 25(OH)D3 was higher in unaffected individuals than in their affected siblings, but the finding did not reach statistical significance. | 3a |
Perez Serena [104] | 2007 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 7752 subjects | Levels of serum vitamin D were inversely associated with early AMD but not advanced AMD. The odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence interval (CI) for early AMD among participants in the highest vs. lowest quintile of serum vitamin D was 0.64 (95% CI, 0.5–0.8; p trend <0.001). | 3a |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Einar Andreas Krefting [118] | 2013 | Norway | 1.Nested case-control; 2. randomized controlled intervention trial | 1. 87 low serum vitamin D3 group and 42 healthy controls (high serum vitamin D3 group 2. 39 vitamin D and 39 placebo | Intraocular pressure in the 87 participants with low serum 25(OH)D levels (mean 40.1 ± 12.9 nm) did not differ from IOP in the 42 participants with high serum 25(OH)D levels (mean 85.1 ± 14.0 nm) (15.9 ± 3.3 mmHg versus 15.6 ± 3.1 mmHg, p = 0.56, independent t-test). No associations between serum 25(OH)D3 levels and IOP, and administration of vitamin D3 to participants with low levels of 25(OH)D3 did not affect IOP. | 9/9 * (RoB) |
Tae Keun Yoo [107] | 2014 | South Korea | Cross-sectional | 290 POAG, 410 Glaucoma suspects and 5394 healthy controls | A reverse J-shaped association between 25(OH)D3 levels and the risk of OAG, with significantly elevated risk at lower 25(OH)D3. | 4a |
Aurélien Goncalves [110] | 2015 | France | Case-control | 99 Severe POAG, 51 moderate POAG, and 164 healthy controls | Decreased serum 25OHD concentration was associated with POAG. There was no 25OHD difference between moderate and severe POAG. | 4a |
Hyun Tae Kim [108] | 2016 | South Korea | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 1627 Glaucoma and 12,1704 healthy controls | In the multivariable-adjusted logistic analysis, the odds ratio of glaucoma in the fourth quintile was significantly lower than that of the first quintile in females (odds ratio, 0.713; 95% confidence interval, 0.520 to 0.979). Lower 25(OH)D level was significantly associated with an elevated risk of glaucoma in females compared with higher 25(OH)D level. | 4a |
Yingjuan Lv [109] | 2016 | China | Hospital-based and case-control study | 71 POAG and healthy controls | The serum levels of 1 a, 25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 in age-matched controls was significantly higher than the levels in POAG patients. (p < 0.001). Vitamin D deficiency and the presence of the BsmI ‘B’ allele and the TaqI ‘t’ allele are relevant risk factors in the development of glaucoma. | 2a |
Željka Vuković Arar [111] | 2016 | Croatia | Case-control | 20 POAG and 20 healthy controls | Serum vitamin D level was statistically significantly lower in glaucoma patients as compared with control group. No statistically significant difference in the IOP values between glaucoma patients and control subjects. | 2a |
Radha Ayyagari [112] | 2019 | United States | Case-control | 357 POAG and 178 healthy controls | Patients with advanced glaucoma had lower serum levels of vitamin D compared with early glaucoma and normal subjects.The mean (95% confidence interval [C]) levels of vitamin D of the subjects in the control (8.02 ± 6.19 pg/mL) and early phenotype (7.56 ± 5.74 pg/mL) groups were significantly or marginally significantly different from the levels observed in subjects with the advanced phenotype (6.35 ± 4.76 pg/mL; p = 0.0117 and 0.0543, respectively). | 2a |
Seyhan Dikci [115] | 2019 | Turkey | Prospective, cross-sectional study | 31 PEX glaucoma, 34 PEX syndrome and 43 healthy controls | No statistically significant difference between the PEX syndrome/glaucoma, and control group in terms of serum vitamin D levels, serum vitamin D levels were lower in PEX syndrome and glaucoma group than control group. | 3b |
K.Atalay [114] | 2019 | Turkey | Prospective, cross-sectional study | 29 XFG, 77 POAG and 33 healthy control | Mean vitamin D levels show a significant difference between the control group and POAG (p = 0.015) | 3a |
Yongwun Cho [119] | 2021 | South Korea | Case-control | 25 OAG and 90 health controls | Patients with OAG had significantly lower 25(OH)D concentrations in aqueous humor than control patients | 4a |
Timur Ekiz [113] | 2016 | United States | Case-control | 23 PEX glaucoma and 46 healthy controls | Although patients with ocular pseudoexfoliation have low bone mineral density and 25(OH)D, bone mineral density and 25(OH)D do not appear to be linked to ocular pseudoexfoliation syndrome in our study population. | 2b |
Tolga Kocaturk [120] | 2019 | Turkey | Cross-sectional | 120 subjects | The IOPg values were higher in cases of vitamin D deficiency. Corneal biomechanical differences in patients with lack of vitamin D were not statistically significant. | 3b |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HülyaAksoy [130] | 2000 | Turkey | Cross-sectional study | 20 DM without DR patients, 15 DM with BDR patients, 14 pre-DM with PDR patients, 17 DM with PDR patients and 20 healthy controls | There was an inverse relationship between the severity of the retinopathy, neovascularization, and serum 1,25(OH)2D3 concentrations, being the lowest in PDR and the highest in diabetic patients without retinopathy patients. Mean 1,25(OH)2D3 concentrations fell with increasing severity of diabetic retinopathy. Only mean 1,25(OH)2D3 concentrations were not significantly different between NDR and BDR, pre-PDR and PDR (p > 0.05). Mean 1,25(OH)2D3 concentrations were significantly different among the other groups (p < 0.05). | 3a |
Atsushi Suzuki [131] | 2006 | Japan | Descriptive study | 581 T2DM patients and 51 healthy controls | Serum concentration of 25(OH)D3 were associated with HbAlc (p = 0.013). Microvascular complications and insulin treatment in T2DM patients are associated with the co-existence of hypovitaminosis D although serum creatinine levels were below 2.0 mg/dl. | 4a |
Harleen Kaur [132] | 2011 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | 517 T1DM patients | Vitamin D deficiency is associated with an increased prevalence of retinopathy in young people with T1DM. In logistic regression, retinopathy was associated with VDD (odds ratio 2.12 [95% CI 1.03–4.33]), diabetes duration (1.13, 1.05–1.23), and HbA1c (1.24, 1.02–1.50). | 4a |
Christel Joergensen [175] | 2011 | Denmark | Prospective observational study | 227 T1DM patients | In patients with type 1 diabetes, severe vitamin D deficiency independently predicts all-cause mortality (unadjusted HR 2.0 [0.9–4.4], p = 0.1 and HR 2.7 [1.1–6.7], p = 0.03, respectively) but not development of microvascular complications in the eye (HR 1.1 [0.7–1.7], p = 0.8) and kidney (unadjusted HR 1.1 [0.5–2.4], p = 0.8 and HR 1.3 [0.3–5.4], p = 0.7, respectively). | 3a |
Patricia A. Patrick [133] | 2012 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 1790 subjects | There is an association between severity of diabetic retinopathy and prevalence of vitamin D deficiency (β = 1.3, p = 0.01, unadjusted; and β = 1.2, p = 0.01, adjusted for age and obesity status given their clinical significance). However, regression analysis of these data did not demonstrate a statistically significant relationship between the 2 variables (β = −0.04, p = 0.07, unadjusted; and β = −0.03, p = 0.13, adjusted). The findings were inconclusive about the existence of a relationship between retinopathy severity and serum 25(OH)D3 concentration. | 3a |
John F Payne [176] | 2012 | Georgia | Cross-sectional study | 221 subjects (17 No diabetes or ocular diseases; 51 No diabetes with ocular disease; 41 No BDR; 40 NPDR; 42 PDR) | Patients with diabetes had lower 25(OH)D levels than did those without diabetes (22.9 ng/mL versus 30.3 ng/mL, respectively; p < 0.001). Patients with diabetes, especially those with PDR, have lower 25(OH)D levels than those without diabetes. The mean 25(OH)D levels, stratified by group, were as follows: no diabetes or ocular disease = 31.9 ng/mL; no diabetes with ocular disease = 28.8 ng/mL; no background diabetic retinopathy = 24.3 ng/mL; nonproliferative diabetic retinopathy = 23.6 ng/mL; and PDR = 21.1 ng/mL | 3a |
Rania NAM Reheem [168] | 2013 | Egypt | Cross-sectional study | 200 DM patients with suspected DR (43 T1DM; 157 T2DM) | Low levels of vitamin D might be a risk marker of development or progression of diabetic retinopathy. Mean serum concentration of 1, 25 dihydroxy vitamin D 3 (1,25(OH)2D3) was significantly lower in diabetic patients with retinopathy than those with no retinopathy (NR) (51.4 ± 16.64 vs. 70.7 ± 15.56 pmol/L, p < 0.001). There was a significant negative correlation between the mean level of 1, 25(OH)2D3 and the degree of severity of retinopathy (p < 0.001). It might be advisable that detailed ophthalmologic examination is needed for diabetics whose serum 1, 25(OH)2D3 concentrations gradually decreased. The measurement of serum 1, 25(OH)2D3 concentrations could become a useful biochemical means to predict the severity of DR in patients with diabetes mellitus | 3a |
Hala Ahmadieh [134] | 2013 | Lebanon | Cross-sectional study | 136 T2DM and 74 controls | Low serum 25(OH)D3 level was an independent predictor for diabetic neuropathy (OR 4.5 [95% CI 1.6–12]) and diabetic retinopathy (OR 2.8 [95% CI 2.1–8.0]) in patients with T2DM for vitamin D < 20 versus vitamin D ≥ 20 ng/mL after adjustment for HbA1c, age, smoking, BMI and disease duration. | 4a |
Myra Poon [177] | 2013 | Australia | Cross-sectional study | 481 DM | VDD was associated with a two-fold increased risk of DR. VDD is not associated with changes in retinal vascular geometric measures, suggesting an earlier role in the time course of DR pathogenesis. | 4a |
Jimmy D. Alele [170] | 2013 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 936 T2DM patients | Vitamin D status had no significant impact on the incidence of vascular events in a cohort of high-risk veterans with diabetes. No differences in the odds associated with retinopathy or renal disease onset or progression in the lowest versus highest vitamin D quartile were observed. | 4b |
NaokiShimo [135] | 2014 | Japan | Cross-sectional study | 75 T1DM patients (21 with VDD; 54 without VDD) | Vitamin D deficiency was significantly associated with retinopathy in young Japanese T1DM patients. In a multivariate regression analysis, duration of diabetes (adjusted OR; 1.14, 95% CI; 1.02–1.27, p = 0.02) and VDD (adjusted OR; 3.45, 95% CI; 1.11–10.6, p = 0.03) were independent determinants of DR. | 4a |
R He [136] | 2014 | China | Cross-sectional study | 625 T2DM with no DR patients, 562 T2DM with non-sight-threatening DR patients and 333 T2DM with sight-threatening DR patients | Vitamin D deficiency is an independent risk factor for diabetic retinopathy (OR 1.93) and sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy (OR 2.42) (both p < 0.01). The prevalence of sight-threatening diabetic retinopathy doubles when the serum 25(OH)D3 level is <15.57 ng/mL (odds ratio 2.38, p < 0.01). | 4a |
Sarita Bajaj [137] | 2014 | India | Observational caase-control study | 158 T2DM patients and 130 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency was found to be significantly associated with neuropathy (χ2 = 5.39, df = 1, p = 0.020), retinopathy (χ2 = 6.6, df = 1, p = 0.010), and nephropathy (χ2 = 10. 52, df = 1, p = 0.001). | 2a |
Donghyun Jee [169] | 2014 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 18,363 subjects | There was an inverse relationships of blood 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels with any DR and proliferative DR but only in men. After adjusting for potential confounders, including age, sex, diabetes duration, hemoglobin A1c levels, and hypertension, the odds ratios (OR) for any DR and proliferative DR among men decreased significantly in the highest blood 25-hydroxyvitamin D level quintile relative to the lowest quintile (OR, 0.37; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.18–0.76; p for trend =0.004 and OR, 0.15; 95% CI, 0.03–0.83; p for trend = 0.043). | 4a |
Giacomo Zoppini [138] | 2015 | Italy | Cross-sectional study | 715 T2DM patients | There is an inverse and independent relationship between circulating 25(OH)D3 levels and the prevalence of microvascular complications in patients with T2DM. Serum 25(OH)D levels decreased significantly in relation to the severity of either retinopathy or nephropathy or both. In multivariate logistic regression analysis, lower 25(OH)D levels were independently associated with the presence of microvascular complications (considered as a composite end point; OR 0.758; 95% CI 0.607 to 0.947, p = 0.015). | 4a |
Markus Herrmann [139] | 2015 | Australia, New Zealand, and Finland | Multinational, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | 9795 T2DM patients | Low blood 25(OH)D3 concentrations are associated with an increased risk of macrovascular and microvascular disease events in T2DM. A 50 nmol/L difference in blood 25OH-D concentration was associated with a 23% (p = 0.007) change in risk of macrovascular complications. | 4a |
G Bhanuprakash Reddy [167] | 2015 | India | Cross-sectional case-control study | 82 T2DM with DR patients and 99 healthy controls | There is a possible association between vitamin D deficiency and type 2 diabetes, but not specifically with retinopathy. | 3a |
Celil Alper Usluogullari [140] | 2015 | Turkey | Cross-sectional study | 557 T2DM patients (299 DPN, 223 DN and 235 DR) and 112 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency is associated with microvascular complications in DM patients. After adjustment, the 25 (OH) D level was confirmed to be an independent protective factor for DPN (odds ratio [OR]: 0.968, p = 0.004]) and DN (OR: 0.962, p = 0.006). The prevalence of DPN and DN increased significantly as the serum 25 (OH) D levels decreased. | 4a |
Nuria Alcubierre [154] | 2015 | Spain | Case-Control study | 139 DR patients and 144 NDR patients | Patients with more advanced stages of retinopathy (grades 2–4) had lower concentrations of 25(OH)D and were more frequently vitamin D deficient as compared with patients not carrying this eye complication. The multivariate analyses showed that there was a significant association of retinopathy and 25(OH)D, even when considering other variables associated with this variable which were consistent when analyzing both the concentrations of 25(OH)D and the presence of vitamin D deficiency, as defined by a 25(OH)D <15 ng/mL (values 0.04 and 0.009, respectively.) | 2a |
Shokoufeh Bonakdaran [174] | 2015 | Iran | Cross-sectional study | 235 T2DM patients (153 NDR, 64 NPDR and 18 PDR) | This study did not find any association between diabetic retinopathy and its severity and vitamin D insufficiency. Vitamin D insufficiency is not related to risk factors of diabetic retinopathy. 25(OH)D level was not significant different between NDR, NPDR and PDR groups. Correlation between 25 (OH) D level and other known risk factors of diabetic retinopathy was not significant. | 3b |
Lian Engelen [155] | 2015 | 16 European countries | Prospective cohort study | 532 T1DM patients | In individuals with type 1 diabetes, both higher 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3 are associated with a lower prevalence of macroalbuminuria, but not of retinopathy and CVD. | 3b |
Adem Gungor [156] | 2015 | Turkey | Prospective study | 50 VDD with DR patients and 50 VDD without DR patients | The results indicate that vitamin D functions as a neuroprotective component for optic nerves. Low serum 25(OH)D concentrations contribute to RNLF thinning in early-stage DR patients with VDD. The mean RNFL thickness of group 1 was significantly reduced compared to that of group 2 (p < 0.001). A significant relationship between the mean RNFL thickness and serum 25(OH)D concentrations was observed in group 1 (p < 0.001). | 3a |
Amy E Millen [178] | 2016 | United States | Population-based prospective study | 1305 DM patients | 25(OH)D3 concentrations ≥75 nmol/L were associated with lower odds of any retinopathy assessed 3 years later. ORs (95 % CIs) for retinopathy, adjusted for race and duration, were 0.77 (0.45–1.32), 0.64 (0.37–1.10), and 0.39 (0.20–0.75), p for trend = 0.001, for participants with 25(OH)D of 30–<50, 50–<75, and ≥75 nmol/L, respectively. Further adjustment for hypertension minimally influenced results (data not show), but adjustment for HBA1c attenuated the OR among those with 25(OH)D ≥75 (0.47 [0.23–0.96], p for trend = 0.030). | 3a |
Uazman Alam [171] | 2016 | UK | Prospective observational follow-up study | 657 DM patients (257 NDR, 243 BDR, 135 PPDR and 22 PDR) | This study has found no association between serum 25(OH)D and the presence and severity of diabetic retinopathy or maculopathy. There was no correlation of DR with 25(OH)D (OR 1.00 (95% CI 0.98–1.02), = NS), gender, or ethnicity. | 3b |
Chan-Hee Jung [179] | 2016 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 257 T2DM patients (men: 21 deficient, 60 insufficient and 30 sufficient; women: 63 deficient, 72 insufficient and 11 sufficient) | Serum 25(OH)D level < 10 ng/mL is independently associated with increased DPN in male patients and increased DN in female patients with T2DM. For men, the prevalence of DPN was significantly higher in vitamin D deficient patients than those with insufficient or sufficient vitamin D (38%, 11.7%, and 10%, respectively; p = 0.005). The prevalence of DR and DN was not different according to the vitamin status. For women, the prevalence of DN was significantly higher in patients with vitamin D deficiency than in the other 2 vitamin D status (40%, 20.6%, and 0%, for vitamin D-deficient, vitamin D-insufficient, and vitamin D-sufficient groups, respectively; p = 0.007) and the prevalence of DPN and DR was not different among 3 status. | 4a |
Xianglong Yi [180] | 2016 | China | Case-control study | 22 PDR patients, 29 NPDR patients and 24 healthy controls | There is a potential protective effect of 1,25(OH)2 D3 in DR, whereas supplementation with 1,25(OH)2 D3 might be an effective strategy for preventing the development of DR | 2a |
M Long [141] | 2017 | United States | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 842 DR patients, 301 mild NPR patients, 195 severe NPR patients and 106 PDR | Vitamin D deficiency associated with severe DR in patients with well controlled glycasemia. After adjusting gender, ethnicity and duration of diabetes, the interaction of HbA1 with vitamin D deficiency significantly affected retinopathy severity (p = 0.029). | 4b |
Banu Boyuk [157] | 2017 | Turkey | Cross-sectional case-control study | 206 T2DM patients and 34 healthy controls | There is an inverse relationship between the circulating 25(OH) D level and the prevalence of retinopathy and neuropathy in T2DM patients. The level of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH) D) was significantly lower in the T2DM patients (11.16 ± 3.99 ng/mL vs. 15.58 ± 3.16 ng/mL; p < 0.05). Serum 25(OH) D levels weresignificantly lower in the presence of retinopathy and neuropathy (p < 0.05 for both), but no significant association between Vitamin D level and microalbuminuria was found. | 3b |
Anurag Chaurasia [158] | 2017 | India | Case-control study | 120 DM patients (40 No BDR, 42 mild-mod NPDR and 38 sev–v.serv NPDR and PDR) and 100 NDM patients (58 no DM and ocular diseases and 42 no DM with ocular diseases) | Diabetic subjects, especially those with NPDR (severe and very severe grade) and PDR have lower Vitamin D levels than those without diabetes. Subjects with vitamin D insufficiency are at risk of having retinopathy 9.75 times that of vitamin D sufficient subjects (Odds Ratio 9.75; 95% C.I. 1.96 to 48.46). The mean vitamin D level in Diabetics (20.7 ± 6.91 ng/mL) is significantly less than that in non-diabetics (27.51 ± 5.53 ng/mL) (p < 0.0001). Also, diabetics have significantly higher proportion of subjects with vitamin D insufficiency (91.3%) as compared to Non-Diabetics (68%). | 4a |
Beteal Ashinne [142] | 2018 | India | Retrospective study | 3054 T2DM patients | Lower serum 25(OH)D3 was associated with increased severity of DR and the presence of vitamin D deficiency was associated with a two-fold increased risk for PDR. A statistically significant difference in the serum vitamin D means of these categorizations: no DR (13.7 ± 2.1 ng/mL), non-sight threatening DR (12.8 ± 2.1 ng/mL), sight threatening DR (11.1 ± 2.2 ng/mL), (p < 0.001). | 4a |
Abdulbari Bener [143] | 2018 | Turkey | Cross-sectional study | 638 DM patients | Vitamin D deficiency is considered as a risk factor for DR and hearing loss among diabetic patients. | |
Krishnamoorthy Ezhilarasi [181] | 2018 | India | Case-control study | 200 T2DM patients, 216 T2DM with microvascular complications, 198 T2DM with macrovascular complications and 252 controls with nomal glucose tolerance | VDR (rs1544410) SNP was found to be associated with decreased serum (25[OH]D) levels in both micro-macrovascular complications of T2DM among South Indian Population. | 4a |
Josef Richter [159] | 2018 | Czech Republic | Clinic Controlled Trial | 52 DR patients (Vitamin D and Beta-glucan supplement, Vitamin D and placebo supplement and vitamin D supplement only) | Significant vitamin D deficits were found in all cases, even after three months of supplementation with vitamin D. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
Martina Závorková [182] | 2018 | Czech Republic | Clinic Controlled Trial | 54 DR patients (beta-glucan and vitamin D supplement, vitamin D and placebo supplement, vitamin D supplement only, no supplementation | Glucan and vitamin D supplementation strongly influence lipid metabolism and have positive effects on human health. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
Gauhar Nadri [144] | 2019 | India | Cross-sectional study | 24 DM without DR patients, 24 DM with NPDR patients and 24 DM with PDR patients | Serum vitamin D levels of ≤ 18.6 ng/mL serve as sensitive and specific indicator for proliferative disease, among patients of DR. Univariate ordinal logistic regression analysis found vitamin D as a significant predictor of severity of diabetic retinopathy {OR (95% CI) = 1.11 (1.06–1.16) (p < 0.01 or p < 0.001)}. ROC curve analysis demonstrated vitamin D cut off value of 18.6 ng/mL to be significantly associated with NPDR and PDR | 4a |
Jing Yuan [145] | 2019 | China | Cross-sectional study | 889 T2DM patients | Vitamin D deficiency is significantly associated with risk of PDR. The odd ratio in VDD individuals was significantly increased (1.84, 95% CI 1.18–2.86) for DR, 1.60 (95% CI 1.06–2.42) for PDR, compared with those in vitamin D sufficient individuals, adjusted by age, sex, blood pressure, kidney function, diabetic duration, and HbA1c. | 4a |
Heng Wan [146] | 2019 | China | Cross-sectional study | 4767 DM patients | Lower serum 25(OH)D3 concentration is significantly associated with higher prevalence of DR in middle-aged and elderly diabetic adults. Compared with the first 25(OH)D quartile (relatively lower concentraion), participants in the fourth quartile (relatively higher concentration) had a lower prevalence of high ACR (OR 0.77, 95% CI 0.61, 0.96) (p for trend <0.01). For DR, the OR of DR for the fourth 25(OH)D quartile when compared with the first quartile was 0.62 (95% CI: 0.47, 0.82; p for trend <0.01). | 4a |
Abdulhalim Senyigit [160] | 2019 | Turkey | Cross-sectional study | 163 T2DM patients and 40 controls | Low serum 25-OHD levels were found to be associated with the development of diabetes and complications. Serum 25(OH)D levels in all patients were significantly lower than the control group (p < 0.05). Levels of 25(OH)D for those with complications were lower than that without complications. (p values for nephropahty and retinopathy groups were <0.001 while that for neuropahty was <0.01). Low serum 25-OHD levels may be a consequence of even worse metabolic control of diabetes. | 3a |
Abdulla Almoosa [161] | 2019 | Bahrain | Prospective observational study | 300 T2DM patients (150 NDR, 99 NPDR and 51 PDR) | VDD was commonly found in type II DM patients. Lower serum 25(OH)D levels were associated with more severe DR. | 3b |
Mehrdad Afarid [148] | 2020 | Iran | Cross-sectional study | 21 DM with NPR patients, 9 DM with PDR patients and 30 DM with no DR patients | Patients with DR had lower levels of serum vitamin D compared with those without retinopathy, especially those with severe NPDR and PDR | 3a |
Amy E. Millen [178] | 2020 | Portugal | Retrospective observational study | 182 T1DM patients | Lower levels of vitamin D were associated with an increased prevalence of diabetic retinopathy in patients with T1DM, after adjusting for possible confounders. The lower circulating 25(OH)D levels were significantly associated with greater prevalence of DR after adjusting for confounders (OR = 0.94; 95% CI 0.90–0.99, p = 0.023). | 4a |
Lina H. M. Ahmed [150] | 2020 | Qatar | Case-control study | 274 T2DM patients and 222 healthy controls | Vitamin D3 was associated with diabetic retinopathy whilst vitamin D2 was not. | 2a |
Lina H. M. Ahmed [162] | 2021 | Qatar | Cross-sectional study | 460 T2DM patients and 290 healthy controls | Vitamin D3 metabolites were associated with diabetic retinopathy, whereas total vitamin D levels were not, suggesting that endogenous vitamin D(3) metabolites are a better measure of diabetic microvascular complications. The lower 1,25(OH)2D3 levels were associated with diabetic retinopathy (p = 0.006) hypertension and dyslipidemia (both p = 0.01) and CAD (p = 0.012); while no association between either total 1,25(OH)2D or 1,25(OH)2D3 levels with diabetic neuropathy, PAD or CAD. | 3a |
Alexandra E. Butler [147] | 2020 | Qatar | Cross-sectional study | 460 T2DM patients and 290 healthy controls | Lower 25(OH)D(3) was associated with retinopathy (p < 0.03) and dyslipidemia (p < 0.04), but not neuropathy or vascular complications | 3a |
Ying Xiao [166] | 2020 | China | Cross-sectional study | 4284 T2DM patients | In unadjusted analyses, DR was associated with VDD status (PR: 1.147; 95% CI: 1.025–1.283), the associate retained after adjusted with age and sex and other demographic and physical measurements. However, the significance diminished after adjusting all confounders (PR: 1.093; 95% CI: 0.983–1.215). | 4a |
Gauhar Nadri [163] | 2021 | India | Cross-sectional study | 66 T2DM patients (22 No DR, 22 NPDR and 22 PDR) and 22 controls | Low serum vitamin D levels correlate with increased severity of DR. | 4a |
Li Lu [151] | 2021 | China | Retrospective study | 55 PDR patients, 25 non-diabetic patients with idiopathic macular hole patients and 10 NDR patients | In ROC-curve analyses, both serum and vitreous 25(OH)D showed discriminatory ability in predicting DR (NPDR and PDR) and PDR. In DR prediction, they obtained the same area under curve (AUC) of 0.77. Serum 25 (OH) D has a better predictive value (AUC: 0.77) than serum 25 (OH) D (AUC: 0.66) in PDR prediction. | 4a |
Wei-Jing Zhao [152] | 2021 | China | Cross-sectional study | 815 T2DM patients | Vitamin D deficiency is independently associated with higher risk of diabetic peripheral neuropathy and DR, but not diabetic retinopathy, in T2DM patients. Univariate analysis showed that the 25 (OH) D was significantly correlated with DPN (odds ratio [OR]: 0.969, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.950–0.989, p = 0.003) and DN (OR: 0.950, 95% CI: 0.928–0.973, p < 0.001), but not with DR (OR: 1.014, 95% CI: 0.994–1.034, p = 0.165). Multiple logistic regression analysis after adjustment showed that the 25 (OH) D level was an independent protective factor for DPN and DN. | 4a |
Xin Zhao [153] | 2021 | China | Retrospective study | 636 T2DM patients (466 NDR, 120 BDR and 50 PDR) | A close association was observed between 25(OH)D3 level and DR in the elderly male patients and postmenopausal women with T2DM. There was a significant difference was observed among the three groups in men and women (men: χ2 = 7:75, p < 0.05; women: χ2 = 7:75, p < 0.05) | 4a |
Mehmet Balbaba [172] | 2021 | Turkey | Prospective study | 20 T2DM-DR patients, 20 T2DM-NDR patients and 20 healthy controls | Vitamin D levels were similar between diabetic patients with and without DR and healthy control subjects | 3b |
Saeed Karimi [183] | 2021 | Iran | Prospective comparative case series study | 71 diabetic macular edema patients | In diabetic macular edema patients with vitamin D deficiency, vitamin D supplement therapy had some beneficial effects on central macular thickness reduction following three injections of intravitreal bevacizumab; nevertheless, these effects were not statistically significant | 8/9 * (RoB) |
Elise Girard [173] | 2021 | French Guiana | Cross-sectional study | 361 DM patients | There was no significant difference between type of diabetes and VD deficiency. There was no significant relation between nephropathy and vitamin D deficiency even after adjustment with confounders. Patients with diabetic retinopathy had significantly greater median vitamin D concentrations than those without retinopathy (respectively, 31 ng/mL (interquartile range (IQR) = 23–34) vs. 26 ng/mL (IQR = 23–32), p = 0.03). | 4a |
José M. Castillo-Otí [164] | 2021 | Spain | Case-Control study | 385 T2DM patients (30 with DR, 335 without DR) | Levels of 25(OH)D and treatment of diabetes were significantly associated with DR after adjusting for other risk factors. Patients with both 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D less than or equal to 16 ng/mL and 29 pg/mL respectively had a greated risk of DR (OR 5.21, 95% CI: 1.76, 15.42; p = 0.003). | 4a |
Martina Tomić [165] | 2021 | Croatia | Cross-sectional study | 94 T2DM patients (69 without DR and 25 with NPDR) | Hypovitaminosis D is often in T2DM, especially in those with proliferative DR. | 3b |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
B Bang [211] | 1999 | Denmark | Case-control study | 41 Primary SS patients and 596 healthy controls | Vitamin D metabolism may be involved in the pathogenesis of primary SS. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
Anat Galor [212] | 2014 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 247 subjects | Higher vitamin D levels had a favorable but small effect on DES symptoms. Higher vitamin D levels were significantly associated with lower DES symptoms (−1.24 decrease for every 10-U increase in vitamin D, p = 0.01). | 2b |
B E Kurtul [213] | 2015 | Turkey | Case-control study | 34 Vitamin D deficiency patients and 21 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency decreases the TBUT and Schirmer test values and may be associated with dry-eye symptoms in non-SS. The TBUT scores and Schirmer-1 test values of study group were significantly lower than that of the control group (p = 0.01 and 0.007, respectively). | 3a |
Pelin Yildirim [214] | 2015 | Turkey | Case-control study | 50 Premenopausal women with vitamin D deficiency and 48 healthy controls | Dry eye and impaired tear function in patients with vitamin D deficiency may indicate a protective role of vitamin D in the development of dry eye. There were significant differences between the vitamin D deficiency group and control group for the frequencies of the patients with dry eye (p-value for the results of Schirmer’s test, TBUT and OSDI were 0.001, 0.001 and 0.003 respectively). | 3a |
Donghyun Jee [227] | 2016 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 1679 DES patients and 14,717 No DES patients | The present study does not support an association between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels and DES. | 2a |
Ki Won Jin [215] | 2016 | South Korea | Retrospective observational study | 79 DES patients | TBUT and secretion were correlated with serum vitamin D levels. Tear break-up time (TBUT) and tear secretion were shorter in the vitamin D-deficient group compared to the sufficient group (p = 0.022 and p = 0.004). Vitamin D status may be an important factor for dry eye syndrome. | 4a |
Sam Young Yoon [216] | 2016 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 1822 DES patients and 15,720 healthy controls | Low serum 25(OH)D3 levels and inadequate sunlight exposure are associated with DES in Korean adults. Inadequate sunlight exposure time (odds ratio [OR], 1.554; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.307–1.848), low serum 25(OH)D level (OR, 1.158; 95% CI, 1.026–1.308) and indoor occupation (OR, 1.578; 95% CI, 1.389–1.814) were the risk factors for DES. Sufficient sunlight exposure or vitamin D supplementation may be useful in DES treatment. | 8/9 * (RoB) |
Rohit Shetty [217] | 2016 | India | Cross-sectional study | 52 evaporative dry eye patients and 43 healthy controls | In the evaporative dry eye cohort, there were strong inverse correlation between the vitamin D levels and OSDI scores (total and discomfort- and vision-related subscales) but not total corneal DC density, DCs without dendritic process, or subbasal nerve plexus features. | 2b |
Rohit Shetty [218] | 2016 | India | Cross-sectional study | 19 Mild dry eye signs with exaggerated symptoms patients and 19 healthy controls | Decreased serum vitamin D was associated with exaggerated symptoms in dry eye patients with mild dry eye signs. An inverse correlation (r = −0.569; p = 0.0110) was observed between serum vitamin D levels and OSDI score in the patient cohort. Tukey’s multiple comparisons test showed a significant difference between the OSDI score of patients with serum vitamin D less than or equal to 10 ng/mL and greater than 20 ng/mL. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
Seok Hyun Bae [219] | 2016 | South Korea | Retrospective observational study | 105 DES refractory to conventional treatment and vitamin D deficiency patients | Vitamin D supplementation is effective and useful in the treatment of patients with DES refractory to conventional treatment and with vitamin D deficiency. The TBUT in males was increased after 2 weeks compared to pre–treatment and in female it was increased after 2 and 6 weeks compared to pre-treatment (p = 0.041, <0.001 and <0.001, respectively, paired t-test). OSDI score in men was lower at 6 weeks compared to pre-treatment and in women it was lower at 10 weeks compared to pre-treatment (p = 0.033 and 0.012, respectively, paired t-test). | 3a |
Min Ji Kim [228] | 2017 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 1428 DES patients and 7921 healthy controls | Severe vitamin D deficiency was associated with dry eye in an unadjusted model (p = 0.01), but the association was not statistically significant after adjustment (p = 0.49, Vit D insufficiency; p = 0.33, VDD; p = 0.18, sever VDD). OR was 1.24 (95% CI, 0.66 to 2.41) for vitamin D insufficiency, 1.30 (95% CI, 0.75 to 2.25) for vitamin D deficiency, and 1.42 (95% CI, 0.83 to 2.41) for severe vitamin D deficiency after adjusting confounders. | 4a |
Da-Hye Jeon [229] | 2017 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 393 DES patients and 347 healthy controls | Serum vitamin D levels are not associated with DES after adjusting confounders. Higher serum vitamin D levels were associated with a non-significantly reduced risk of DED in the crude analysis (odds ratio [OR], 0.991; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.971 to 1.011) and in the adjusted analysis (OR, 0.988; 95% CI, 0.966 to 1.010). | 8/9 * (RoB) |
Yi-Fang Meng [220] | 2017 | China | Case-control study | 70 DES patients and 70 healthy controls | A significant association between serum 25(OH)D level and DES incidence was detected. In Pearson correlation analysis, serum 25(OH)D level was associated with increased Schimer test I (r = 0.8248, p < 0.001). In addition, there was an inverse correlation between serum 25(OH)D and ODSI scores (r = −0.3348, p = 0.005) and TBUT (r = −0.6806, p < 0.001). | 4a |
Reiko Arita [231] | 2017 | Japan | Clinical trial | 8 MGD patients and 6 healthy controls | Topical eyelid application of an analog of the active form of vitamin D3 was found to be safe as well as to improve the condition of patients with obstructive meibomian gland dysfunction. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
Muhammed Kizilgul [232] | 2017 | United States | Clinical trial | 44 DES patients | As a consequence of the presence of VDR and 1α-hydroxylase in different parts of the eye, vitamin D replacement improves tear hyperosmolarity that is considered to be induced by ocular surface inflammation. The change of TFO was negatively correlated with the change of 25(OH)D3 before and after replacement in patients with dry eye disease (r = −0.390, p = 0.049). | 2b |
Chih-Huang Yang [233] | 2017 | Australia | Case-control study | 29 DES patients and 29 healthy controls | Low vitamin D levels (<50 nmol/l) were associated with dry eye symptoms in older individuals but not those diagnosed with dry eye. Vitamin D supplement increased the vitamin D levels, and improved dry eye symptoms, the tear quality and ocular surface conditions. | 3a |
Goktug Demirci [221] | 2018 | Turkey | Cross-sectional observational study | 30 Vitamin D deficiency patients and 30 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency is associated with tear hyperosmolarity and tear film dysfunction. The Schirmer I test values and TBUT measurements for VDD were significantly lower compared with controls (p < 0.001). Patients with vitamin D deficiency may be prone to dry eye. | 3a |
Pooja Khamar [222] | 2019 | India | Cross-sectional study | 47 evaporative dry eye patients and 33 healthy controls | Significantly lower vitamin D was observed in DED patients (p < 0.05). These dysregulated tear factors showed significant associations with DED signs and symptoms. | 2a |
Hwang Jin Sun [234] | 2019 | South Korea | Case-control study | 116 DED patients (52 VDD and 64 non-VDD) | The OSDI score was decreased in the IM group (intramascular supplementation of vitamin D for 2 weeks) after cholecalciferol supplementation compared with pretreatment, whereas that in the none group and oral group was not different between after cholecalciferol supplementation and pretreatment. The effect of topical carbomer-based lipid–containing artificial tears and hyaluronate was dependent on serum 25HD levels. | 4a |
Jee Hye Lee [223] | 2020 | South Korea | Retrospective study | 74 Primary SS patients | Serum 25(OH)D3 level might be associated with dry eye severity in primary SS. Among dry eye parameters, the corneal staining score, conjunctival staining score, Schirmer I value, and TBUT were statistically worse in the serum 25(OH)D3 deficiency group compared with the normal group (p < 0.05). The conjunctival staining score showed a significant difference between the deficiency group and insufficiency group (p < 0.05). | 8/9 * (RoB) |
Palak Watts [235] | 2020 | India | Prospective study | 90 DED with deficient serum 25(OH)D3 levels patients | Vitamin D supplementation leads to earlier and significant improvement in TBUT, Schirmer’s, and OSDI score in patients with vitamin D deficient DED. | 2b |
Seyhan Dikci [226] | 2020 | Turkey | Case-control study | 36 Vitamin D deficiency patients and 27 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency may lead to dry eye causing conjunctival squamous metaplasia and loss of goblet cells on the ocular surface. Serum vitamin D levels had moderate negative correlation with CIC results (r = −0.595; p < 0.001), and mild positive correlation with TBUT scores (r = 0.384, p = 0.002). There was no correlation between serum vitamin D levels and Schirmer II test and OSDI scores (r = 0.169, p = 0.185, r = 0.163, p = 0.202, respectively). No correlation was found between age and Schirmer’s II, TBUT, OSDI scores, and CIC results. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
Emine Esra Karaca [236] | 2020 | Turkey | Clinical controlled trial | 40 Vitamin D deficiency patients | Vitamin D replacement appears to improve ocular surface in individuals with vitamin D deficiency. | 3a |
Aksoy Aydemir, Gozde [225] | 2021 | Turkey | Prospective cross-sectional study | 90 Pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus patients and 80 healthy controls | The tear measurements of the pediatric type 1 diabetes mellitus were lower than those in the healthy pediatric control group. The accompanying VDD made this situation more pronounced. The correlations between the vitamin D level and the Schirmer test, OSDI score, CSS, TF–BUT measurements, TMA, and TMH values were examined in T1DM group and control groups. Although there was a significant correlation in all measurements in T1DM group, there was no correlation in control groups. | 4a |
Shima Fukuoka [224] | 2021 | Japan | Cross-sectional study | 300 subjects | High intake of total fat, SFAs, oleic acid, and vitamin D may be inversely associated with the prevalence of MGD in Japanese individuals. Vitamin D intake in the MGD group was significantly lower than that in the non-MGD group (p = 0.039). Multivariate adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) between extreme quintiles of intake of vitamin D for MGD prevalence was 0.38 (0.17–0.87). | 8/9 * (RoB) |
Alireza Eslampoor [237] | 2022 | Iran | RCT | 100 dry eye disease patients with concurrent vitamin D deficiency | Vitamin D supplementation as an adjuvant to routine dry eye treatment improves ocular surface hemostasis parameters, results in better tear stability and a more improved tear osmolarity in patients with vitamin D deficiency. | 4a |
Jain Nikita [238] | 2022 | India | Hospital-based cross-sectional | 60 VDD patients and 60 normal levels subjects | A significant difference in the mean values of Schirmer I and Schirmer I test (with anesthesia) (p < 0.001) was seen between the case and control groups. A significant difference in the mean values of TFBUT (p < 0.001) and OSDI scores (p < 0.01) was also seen between the two groups. | 7/9 * (RoB) |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ama Sadaka [245] | 2019 | United States | Retrospective study | 35 TED patients | 20% and 31% prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency were found in TED, respectively. | 4a |
Curtis J Heisel [246] | 2020 | United States | Retrospective case-control study | 89 TED patients (TED), 89 GD patients without TED (GD), and 2 healthy control groups matched 4:1 to the cases; 356 healthy control patients matched to the TED group (HC TED), and 356 HC patients matched to the GD (HC GD) | Low serum vitamin D is associated with TED diagnosis. Assessing and supplementing vitamin D levels may be an important addition to the early management of GD patients. | 4a |
Tereza Planck [247] | 2018 | Sweden | Cross sectional study | Epidemiological part—292 GD patients and 2305 healthy controls Clinical part—219 GD patients Relapse analysis after antithyroid drug treatment part —100 GD patients Genetic part—708 GD patients with (n = 245) or without (n = 459) ophthalmopathy and 1178 sex-matched controls | Patients with GD had lower vitamin D levels compared to the general population; however, the vitamin D levels did not affect the laboratory or clinical parameters of GD. SNPs in the VDR influenced the risk of GD through mechanisms other than reducing the vitamin D levels. | 4a |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stephanie M. Llop [251] | 2018 | United States | Retrospective case-control study | 333 Uveitis patients, 103 scleritis patients and 329 controls | Hypovitaminosis D was associated with increased risk of ocular inflammation | 4a |
Lindsay A Grotting [255] | 2017 | United States | Retrospective case-control study | 100 Noninfectious anterior uveitis patients and 100 healthy controls | Lower vitamin D levels are associated with an increased risk of noninfectious anterior uveitis. | 4a |
Xianglong Yi [256] | 2011 | China | Case-control study | 8 active VKH patients, 7 inactive VKH patients and 8 healthy controls | These findings suggest that decreased expression of 1,25(OH)2D3 may be involved in the development of VKH disease. 1,25(OH)2D3 may be potentially used in the treatment of this disease. | 4b |
Zeynep Dadaci [254] | 2016 | Turkey | Case-control study | 20 acute anterior uveitis patients and 20 healthy controls | Significantly low serum levels of vitamin D was found in patients with acute anterior uveitis, which suggest that vitamin D deficiency may play a role in the pathogenesis of anterior uveitis. | 4a |
TC Mitulescu [253] | 2016 | Romania | Case-control study | 11 AS with AAU patients, 23 AS patients without AAU patients and 18 healthy controls | Altered levels of Vit D affect the balance between LL-37, IL-8 and Serum Amyloid A, suggesting an association with AAU, an extra-articular manifestation of AS. | 4b |
Lucia Sobrin [252] | 2018 | United States | Retrospective case-control study | 558 noninfectious uveitis patients and 2790 healthy controls | Hypovitaminosis D may be a risk factor for noninfectious uveitis. | 4a |
Zelia K. Chiu [259] | 2020 | Australia | Prospective case-control study | 74 active and 77 inactive noninfectious uveitis patients and 594 local general population controls | Participants with active uveitis showed significantly lower serum 25(OH)D3 levels than inactive uveitis patients and local population-based estimates. Vitamin D supplementation was found to be associated with decreased uveitis activity, as was sun exposure in those with vitamin D deficiency. | 4a |
Ma’an Abdullah Al-Barry [25] | 2016 | Arabia | Cross-sectional study | 39 VKH patients and 50 healthy controls | low vitamin D levels might play a role in VKH pathogenesis and mutations in genes involved in vitamin D anabolism and catabolism might be of importance in VKH pathobiology. | 3b |
Julien Rohmer [257] | 2020 | France | Retrospective study | 59 Uveitis patients | The measurement of serum 25(OH)D3 and 1,25(OH)2D3 levels is a useful tool in the etiological workup of patients with unexplained uveitis, since a high 1,25(OH)2D3/25(OH)D3 ratio is suggestive of ocular sarcoidosis. | 4a |
Claudia Sengler [258] | 2018 | Germany | Prospective observational, controlled multicenter study | 360 juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) patients and 360 healthy controls | 25(OH)D3 deficiency was common and associated with higher disease activity and risk of developing JIA-associated uveitis. | 3a |
Marta Mora Gonzalez [250] | 2018 | United States | Cross-sectional population-based study | 25 uveitis patients and unknown number of non-uveitis controls | None of the 25 patients were found to have serum vitamin D values indicative of deficiency (less than or equal to 30 nmol/L). | 3b |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fabiola Mejía-Rodríguez [266] | 2021 | Mexico | Case-control study | 126 Sporadic RB patients and 102 healthy controls | Latitude and the number of days exposed to the spring–summer season during 6 to 11.9 months of life were negatively associated with sporadic retinoblastoma in children who had exclusive maternal lactation. | 4a |
Manuela Orjuela-Grimm [267] | 2021 | Mexico | Case-control study | 259 Unilateral RB patients, 120 bilateral RB and 132 healthy controls | Sun exposure in early childhood is protective for retinoblastoma and may decrease degree of intraocular spread in children with bilateral RB. | 4a |
Schundeln Michael M [268] | 2015 | Germany | Cross-sectional study | 14 Unilateral RB patients and 19 bilateral RB | 51.7% of RB patients and 13.7% of RB patients were vitamin D deficient and severe vitamin D deficient, respectively. | 3b |
First Author | Years | Country | Study-Design | Sample Size | Main Finding | Rate # |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aidenloo Naser Samadi [280] | 2021 | Iran | Cross-sectional study | 216 nuclear cataract patients, 336 cortical cataract patients, 140 posterior sub-capsular cataract patients, 549 mixed cataract patients and 200 normal controls | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were inversely associated with the risk of nuclear cataract and cortical cataract and not associated with posterior sub-capsular cataract or mixed cataract in women. No association between vitamin D and cataractogenesis in men. | 4a |
Donghyun Jee [281] | 2015 | South Korea | Population-based cross-sectional study | 18,804 participants (7993 age-related cataracts, 1332 with a history of cataract surgery and 9479 no cataract participants) | Men with higher serum 25(OH)D3 levels have a lower risk for the age-related cataract; while no association were found in women. | 4a |
Sangshin Park [274] | 2016 | South Korea | Cross-sectional study | 16,086 participants (cortical, 1562; nuclear, 4116; anterior subcapsular, 174; posterior subcapsular, 87; mixed, 1013; Q1, 3215; Q2, 3214; Q3, 3217; Q4, 3226; and Q5, 3214) | Serum 25(OH)D3 levels were inversely associated with the risk of nuclear cataract. | 4a |
Caglar Okem [278] | 2021 | Turkey | Sectional case-control study | 37 cataract patients and 53 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency as associated with early age-related cataract. | 4a |
Prethy Rao [280,282] | 2015 | United States | Cross-sectional study | 1278 participants (nuclear cataract, 516; Q1, 256; Q2, 257; Q3, 254; Q4, 256; and Q5, 255) | No significant association between serum 25(OH)D3 levels and nuclear cataract. | 4a |
Craig J Brown [279] | 2015 | United States | Cross-sectional | 175 cataract patients | Vitamin D deficiency was associated with posterior subcapsular cataract. | 4b |
K Atalay [277] | 2020 | Turkey | Hospital-based cross-sectional study | 26 posterior subcapsular cataract patients and 53 age-related cataract without posterior subcapsular cataract patients | Patients with age-related cataract without posterior subcapsular component showed statistically significantly lower vitamin D level than 20 ng/mL (vitamin D insufficiency level). | 4b |
Min-Chul Cho [283] | 2020 | South Korea | Prospective study | 87 senile cataract patients and 49 diabetic cataract patients | Higher 25(OH)D3 levels in aqueous humor was associated with diabetic cataract. | 3a |
Marwa Mahmoud Abdellan [276] | 2019 | Egypt | Case-control study | 325 cataract patients and 385 healthy controls | Vitamin D deficiency may have a role in age-related cataract patients. | 4a |
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Chan, H.-N.; Zhang, X.-J.; Ling, X.-T.; Bui, C.H.-T.; Wang, Y.-M.; Ip, P.; Chu, W.-K.; Chen, L.-J.; Tham, C.C.; Yam, J.C.; et al. Vitamin D and Ocular Diseases: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2022, 23, 4226. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084226
Chan H-N, Zhang X-J, Ling X-T, Bui CH-T, Wang Y-M, Ip P, Chu W-K, Chen L-J, Tham CC, Yam JC, et al. Vitamin D and Ocular Diseases: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2022; 23(8):4226. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084226
Chicago/Turabian StyleChan, Hei-Nga, Xiu-Juan Zhang, Xiang-Tian Ling, Christine Huyen-Trang Bui, Yu-Meng Wang, Patrick Ip, Wai-Kit Chu, Li-Jia Chen, Clement C. Tham, Jason C. Yam, and et al. 2022. "Vitamin D and Ocular Diseases: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 23, no. 8: 4226. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084226
APA StyleChan, H. -N., Zhang, X. -J., Ling, X. -T., Bui, C. H. -T., Wang, Y. -M., Ip, P., Chu, W. -K., Chen, L. -J., Tham, C. C., Yam, J. C., & Pang, C. -P. (2022). Vitamin D and Ocular Diseases: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 23(8), 4226. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23084226