A study found a link between vitamin D levels and the severity of psoriasis. /(Getty Image)
Psoriasis is an autoimmune skin disorder characterized by raised, inflamed and scaly patches of skin that can also be itchy and painful.
The severity of psoriasis varies greatly from person to person.
New research shows that low vitamin D levels may be associated with more severe psoriasis.
Psoriasis is a condition that affects more than 7.5 million peopleTrusted Source in the United States. New research from Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University suggests that low vitamin D levels may be associated with more severe psoriasis.
The exact cause of psoriasis is not fully understood, but scientists believe that it is an autoimmune condition, which means that it is the result of the immune system accidentally attacking your body instead of protecting it. In psoriasis, this autoimmune activity causes new skin cells to be produced much faster than normal, and these skin cells accumulate on the skin’s surface in the form of thick, scaly patches.
Symptoms of psoriasis can range from mild to severe. According to the National Psoriasis Foundation:
mild psoriasis affects less than 3% of the body
moderate psoriasis affects 3–10% of the body
severe psoriasis affects more than 10% of the body
Rachel K. Lim, an MD candidate at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, presented the new study’s findings at NUTRITION 2023, the annual flagship meeting of the American Society for Nutrition held July 22-25 in Boston
What’s the link between vitamin D and psoriasis?
Medical News Today asked Eunyoung Cho, ScD, research team leader and associate professor of dermatology and epidemiology at Brown University, to explain the biological connection between vitamin D and psoriasis.
Dr. Eunyoung Cho
Studies conducted in several countries, including ItalyTrusted Source, BrazilTrusted Source, and NepalTrusted Source, have shown that serum levels of vitamin D are significantly lower in people with psoriasis and correlate with the severity of the disease.
Since most previous studies have been conducted outside of the US, Dr. Cho and her collaborators sought to investigate whether this relationship would be replicated in a large, nationally representative US population.
Vitamin D deficiency linked to more severe psoriasis
Dr. Cho’s team used data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)Trusted Source to identify psoriasis cases between 2003 and 2006 and between 2011 and 2014. They found 491 cases from the 40,401 participants screened, with 162 cases from 2003-2006 and 329 from 2011-2014.
They also collected information about the levels of vitamin D in the blood, psoriasis-affected body surface area (a measure of the extent of psoriasis on the body), and other factors like age, gender, race, body mass index, and smoking habits.
To assess the relationship between low vitamin D levels and the severity of psoriasis, they used a mathematical method called “multivariate linear regressionTrusted Source.”
They found that as the levels of vitamin D in the blood decreased, the severity of psoriasis increased. People with the least psoriasis-affected body surface area had the highest mean serum vitamin D levels (67 nmol/L), while those with the greatest psoriasis-affected body surface area had the lowest mean serum vitamin D levels (56 nmol/L).
The researchers saw a similar trend when they divided people into groups based on psoriasis-affected body surface area and looked at the percentage of people with vitamin D deficiency in each group. 39% of the group with the most severe psoriasis were deficient in vitamin D compared to 25% of the group with the least severe psoriasis.
How new study provides more insights on psoriasis
“Only one previous study, published in 2013, has used NHANES data to analyze the relationship between vitamin D and psoriasis,” Lim was quoted as saying in a press release. “We were able to add more recent data, which more than tripled the number of psoriasis cases analyzed, making our results more up-to-date and statistically powerful than previously available data.”
Dr. Tina Bhutani, associate professor of dermatology, co-director of the Psoriasis and Skin Treatment Center, and director of the Dermatology Clinical Research Unit at the University of California, San Francisco, pointed out that these findings are not novel since “similar associations have been reported in the past trusted Source.”
However, “the advantage of NHANES is that it is likely to be more representative of the US population vs other previous studies given the specialized sampling used by this survey,” Dr. Bhutani told MNT.
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