Article Text

Influence of vitamin D supplementation on muscle strength and exercise capacity in Mongolian schoolchildren: secondary outcomes from a randomised controlled trial
  1. Davaasambuu Ganmaa1,2,
  2. Stephanie Hemmings3,
  3. David A Jolliffe4,
  4. Uyanga Buyanjargal5,
  5. Gantsetseg Garmaa5,
  6. Unaganshagai Adiya5,
  7. Tumenulzii Tumurbaatar5,
  8. Khulan Dorjnamjil5,
  9. Enkhtsetseg Tserenkhuu6,
  10. Sumiya Erdenenbaatar5,
  11. Enkhjargal Tsendjav5,
  12. Nomin Enkhamgalan5,
  13. Chuluun-Erdene Achtai5,
  14. Yagaantsetseg Talhaasuren7,
  15. Tuya Byambasuren7,
  16. Erdenetuya Ganbaatar8,
  17. Erkhembulgan Purevdorj5,
  18. Adrian R Martineau4
  1. 1Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
  2. 2Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
  3. 3University of Brighton, Brighton, UK
  4. 4Blizard Institute, Queen Mary University of London, London, UK
  5. 5Mongolian Health Initiative, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
  6. 6Global Laboratory, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
  7. 7Mongolia Ministry of Health, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
  8. 8Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
  1. Correspondence to Dr Adrian R Martineau; a.martineau{at}qmul.ac.uk

Abstract

Objective To determine whether weekly oral vitamin D supplementation influences grip strength, explosive leg power, cardiorespiratory fitness or spirometric lung volumes in Mongolian schoolchildren.

Methods Multicentre, randomised, placebo-controlled clinical trial conducted in children aged 6–13 years at baseline attending 18 schools in Ulaanbaatar. The intervention was weekly oral doses of 14 000 IU vitamin D3 (n=4418) or placebo (n=4433) for 3 years. Outcome measures were grip strength, standing long jump distance and serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentrations (determined in all participants), peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak, determined in a subset of 632 participants using 20 m multistage shuttle run tests) and spirometric outcomes (determined in a subset of 1343 participants).

Results 99.8% of participants had serum 25(OH)D concentrations <75 nmol/L at baseline, and mean end-study 25(OH)D concentrations in children randomised to vitamin D versus placebo were 77.4 vs 26.7 nmol/L (mean difference 50.7 nmol/L, 95% CI 49.7 to 51.4). However, vitamin D supplementation did not influence mean grip strength, standing long jump distance, VO2peak, spirometric lung volumes or peak expiratory flow rate, either overall or within subgroups defined by sex, baseline 25(OH)D concentration <25 vs ≥25 nmol/L or calcium intake <500 vs ≥500 mg/day.

Conclusion A 3-year course of weekly oral supplementation with 14 000 IU vitamin D3 elevated serum 25(OH)D concentrations in Mongolian schoolchildren with a high baseline prevalence of vitamin D deficiency. However, this intervention did not influence grip strength, explosive leg power, peak oxygen uptake or spirometric lung volumes, either overall or in subgroup analyses.

Trial registration number NCT02276755.

  • Nutrition
  • Fitness testing
  • Children's health and exercise

Data availability statement

Data are available on reasonable request. Anonymised data are available from corresponding authors on reasonable request, subject to terms of IRB and regulatory approval.

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ON THIS TOPIC

  • Observational studies have reported that vitamin D deficiency associates with reduced muscle strength and peak oxygen uptake in children, but randomised controlled trials (RCT) of vitamin D supplementation to improve grip strength and cardiorespiratory fitness in this age group have yielded conflicting results.

WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS

  • This phase 3 multicentre RCT of vitamin D supplementation, conducted in Mongolian schoolchildren with a high baseline prevalence of asymptomatic vitamin D deficiency, found that a 3-year course of weekly oral supplementation with 14 000 IU vitamin D3 was effective in elevating serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations. However, this intervention did not influence participants’ grip strength, long jump distance, peak oxygen uptake, spirometric lung volumes or peak expiratory flow rate, either overall or in subgroup analyses.

HOW THIS STUDY MIGHT AFFECT RESEARCH, PRACTICE OR POLICY

  • Taken together with results from another phase 3 randomised controlled trial of vitamin D supplementation conducted in South African children, our findings do not suggest a role for weekly oral vitamin D supplementation to enhance muscle strength, peak oxygen uptake or respiratory function in schoolchildren in whom rickets has been excluded.

Introduction

Muscular strength and exercise tolerance in childhood are positive correlates of physical and mental health that are associate with reduced cardiometabolic risk later in life.1–4 Vitamin D plays a key role in supporting normal development and function of skeletal muscle, the lung and the heart.5–7 Vitamin D deficiency is common among children living in higher-income and lower-income countries alike8–11 and has been reported to be associated with lower muscle strength, poorer cardiorespiratory fitness and lower spirometric lung volumes in children and adolescents participating in observational studies.12–14 Numerous randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of vitamin D supplementation to improve muscle strength and power have been conducted in adults, with meta-analysis revealing small positive impacts.15 Fewer RCTs have been conducted in children, and these have yielded inconsistent results. One trial in male soccer players in Tunisia aged 8–15 years has reported improvements in jump, sprint and shuttle run outcomes16 while another conducted in girls aged 12–14 year-olds in the UK reported a statistically significant improvement in efficiency of movement, with trends towards improvements in jumping velocity and grip strength.17 Other RCTs conducted in children and adolescents living in Denmark,18 19 the USA,20 Israel21 and Lebanon22 have reported null overall effects for outcomes including grip strength, leg press strength and swimming performance. No such trials have yet been conducted in Asia; moreover, there is a lack of large, multicentre trials examining the impact of prolonged (greater than 1 year) vitamin D supplementation on muscle strength, cardiorespiratory fitness and spirometric outcomes in children with a high baseline prevalence of vitamin D deficiency, regardless of setting.

Given these limitations of the existing evidence base, we took the opportunity to generate new data in this area during the conduct of a phase 3 RCT of vitamin D supplementation in 8851 schoolchildren aged 6–13 years living in Mongolia who were given weekly oral vitamin D supplementation over 3 years.23–25 The primary aim of the trial was to test whether this intervention reduced the risk of incident tuberculosis infection; null results for this outcome have been reported elsewhere.23 This paper reports findings for secondary outcomes that were investigated to test the hypotheses that vitamin D supplementation would improve grip strength and standing long jump distance, measured at annual intervals in all participants; peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak), estimated using 20 m shuttle run tests performed at annual intervals in a subset of 632 participants; and spirometric lung volumes, measured at 3-year follow-up in a subset of 1343 participants.

Methods

Study design, setting, participants, randomisation and intervention

We conducted a parallel two-arm individually randomised placebo-controlled trial in 18 public schools in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, as previously described.23–25 The study protocol is available in online supplemental file 1. The primary outcome of the trial was the acquisition of latent tuberculosis infection; the current manuscript reports the effects of the intervention on prespecified secondary outcomes relating to grip strength, explosive leg power, peak oxygen uptake and spirometric outcomes. Principal inclusion criteria were age 6–13 years at screening and attendance at a participating school; principal exclusion criteria were a positive QuantiFERON-TB Gold in-tube assay (QFT) result, presence of conditions associated with vitamin D hypersensitivity (primary hyperparathyroidism or sarcoidosis) or immunocompromise (taking immunosuppressant medication or cytotoxic therapy), use of vitamin D supplements, signs of rickets (all participants were screened for rickets via physical examination by a paediatrician), or intention to move from Ulaanbaatar within 4 years of enrolment. Trial staff who determined whether subjects were eligible for inclusion in the trial were unaware which group the next subject would be allocated to, that is, allocation was concealed. Eligible participants were individually randomised to receive a weekly capsule containing 14 000 IU (350 µg) vitamin D3 or a weekly capsule of placebo (olive oil) for 3 years, with a one-to-one allocation ratio and stratification by school of attendance. Capsules containing vitamin D3 had identical appearance and taste to placebo capsules. The dose was chosen on the basis of results of another RCT showing that a weekly oral administration of 14 000 IU vitamin D3 to schoolchildren aged 10–17 years for 1 year resulted in a 52.5 nmol/L increase in mean 25(OH)D concentration without inducing adverse events.26

Supplemental material

The randomisation list was computer generated by a statistician (Dr Polyna Khudyakov, Sage Therapeutics, Cambridge, Massachusett, USA) prior to the start of recruitment. This list was held by the data monitoring committee during the conduct of the trial: concealment of allocation was achieved by ensuring that no trial staff (including those who assessed eligibility) had access to the trial randomisation list. All participants and their parents/guardians, and all trial personnel, including principal investigators and all those who had contact with study participants, including those who assessed outcomes, were blinded to participant allocation during the conduct of the trial. The trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02276755).

Baseline procedures

At baseline, participants’ parents were asked to complete questionnaires detailing their socioeconomic circumstances, lifestyle and dietary factors influencing vitamin D status, and intake of foods previously shown to be major contributors to dietary calcium intake in urban Mongolia.27 For all participants, height was then measured using a portable stadiometer (SECA, Hamburg, Germany), weight was measured using a Digital Floor Scale (SECA), grip strength was measured as described elsewhere28 using a portable dynamometer (Takei Digital Grip Strength Dynamometer, Model T.K.K.5401, with the best of two readings for the dominant hand recorded, except where injury precluded measurement, where strength of the other hand was measured), and standing long jump distance was measured as described elsewhere29 using a DiCUNO measuring tape, with the best of two readings recorded. Validity and reliability of the Takei Digital Grip Strength Dynamometer for measurement of grip strength, and of the standing long jump for measurement of lower body muscular power have both been demonstrated in schoolchildren studied in other settings.30 31 In a subset of 620 children who additionally participated in the exercise substudy, a 20 m multistage shuttle run test was administered as described below to determine VO2peak. A blood sample was drawn from all participants at baseline for separation and storage of serum for determination of baseline 25(OH)D concentrations as described below.

Follow-up procedures and outcomes

During school terms, study participants had weekly face-to-face visits at which study capsules were administered and adverse events were recorded. During school holidays, children were either given a single bolus dose of up to 36 000 IU (shorter holidays), study staff travelled to participants’ homes to administer medication, or parents were supplied with sufficient trial medication to cover the holiday period, along with instructions on its storage and administration. Using the same methods as at baseline, all participants were reassessed at 12-month, 24-month and 36-month follow-ups for grip strength and long jump distance. Exercise substudy participants additionally completed 20 m multistage shuttle run tests at 12-month, 24-month and 36-month follow-up, as described below. Spirometry substudy participants additionally underwent spirometry testing at 36-month follow-up using a portable spirometer (spirolab III, Medical International Research, Rome, Italy) and performed according to ERS/ATS standards32 to assess % predicted forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1), % predicted forced vital capacity (FVC), % predicted FEV1/FVC, % predicted peak expiratory flow rate (PEFR) and % predicted forced expiratory flow over the middle one-half of the FVC (FEF25–75).

Measurement of vitamin D status

25(OH)D concentrations were determined in serum samples from baseline and 3-year follow-up using an enzyme-linked fluorescent assay (VIDAS 25OH Vitamin D total, bioMérieux, Marcy-l’Étoile, France). Non-zero 25(OH)D values were standardised using a published method,33 using a set of 40 serum samples provided by DEQAS (the Vitamin D External Quality Assessment Scheme, http://www.deqas.org/). The total coefficient of variation (CV) was 7.9%, the mean bias was 7.7% and the limit of quantitation (LOQ) was 20.2 nmol/L. Values below the LOQ were classified as <20.2 nmol/L.

Exercise test

A 20 m multistage shuttle run test was conducted using freely available recorded instruction (Shuttle run bleep test, www.bleeptests.com). Two lines were marked 20 m apart and an audible ‘beep’ signalled to participants the speed required to run between them. Participants’ number of completed laps was used to derive their estimated VO2peak using a published formula.34

Sample size and statistical methods

All analyses were conducted by using STATA V.IC 15.1 (StataCorp). The sample size calculation for the main trial was based on the power needed to detect a clinically significant effect of the intervention on the primary endpoint (incident latent tuberculosis infection) as described previously.20 For the exercise substudy, assuming an SD for VO2peak of 6.5 mL/kg/min at 3-year follow-up,34 we calculated that a total of 334 participants (167 per arm) would need to be recruited and followed up to have 80% power to detect a clinically significant difference of 2 mL/kg/min between arms with 5% alpha. Allowing for a 20% loss to follow-up, we originally estimated that a total of 420 participants (210 per arm) would need to be recruited for the exercise substudy. Subsequently, we became concerned that rates of loss to follow-up might be higher than originally anticipated, and consequently, the target sample size for this substudy was increased to 614. Ultimately, the exercise substudy over-recruited slightly (n=632). Spirometry was performed for a subset of children who participated in a bone health substudy, powered to detect an effect of the intervention on the radial speed of sound Z-scores as described elsewhere.25

Estimated calcium intakes were calculated on the basis of parental responses to a food frequency questionnaire, as described elsewhere.24 Anthropometric measurements and data on participants’ age and sex were used to compute Z-scores for height-for-age and BMI-for-age, using the Canadian Pediatric Endocrine Group who2007 Shiny App (https://cpeg-gcep.shinyapps.io/who2007_cpeg/) based on WHO 2007 growth reference data for 5–19 years.35 Serum 25(OH)D values were adjusted for seasonal variation prior to analysis using a sinusoidal model.36 Outcomes measured over multiple years’ follow-up were analysed overall and in each subgroup using mixed models for repeated measures with fixed effects for treatment and time and treatment-by-time interaction, adjusted for school of attendance and random effects for individuals. Adjusted treatment mean differences at different time points are presented with 95% CIs, and significance tests were conducted for the treatment effect at each time point and the overall treatment-by-time interaction. Where overall p values were less than 0.05, we applied a Benjamini Hochberg procedure with a 10% false discovery rate37 to the relevant family of p values to adjust for multiple comparisons. Outcomes measured at end-study only were analysed using general linear models, adjusted for school of attendance. Prespecified subgroup analyses were conducted according to participants’ sex (males vs females), baseline deseasonalised 25(OH)D concentration (<25 nmol/L vs ≥25 nmol/L) and estimated calcium intake (<500 mg/day vs ≥500 mg/day). The primary p values for outcome modelling were the overall p values, that is, those associated with the interaction between follow-up time point and treatment allocation.

Patient and public involvement

We consulted children and their parents/guardians on questionnaire design and acceptability of clinical measurements prior to implementation of the trial. Study findings were disseminated via community engagement events.

Equity, diversity and inclusion statement

This trial recruited a group of participants who are under-represented in research (schoolchildren in Mongolia). Participation was open to children of any gender, race/ethnicity/culture and socioeconomic level. The author team is gender-balanced and nationality-balanced and includes junior researchers and perspectives from multiple disciplines. Subgroup analyses were conducted to detect gender differences in response to vitamin D supplementation.

Results

Participants

11 475 children were invited to participate in the study from September 2015 to March 2017 inclusive, of whom 9814 underwent QFT testing: 8851 QFT-negative children were randomly assigned to receive vitamin D or placebo (4418 vs 4433, respectively) as previously described.23 Of these, 632 children (302 vs 330 randomised to vitamin D vs placebo, respectively) also participated in the exercise substudy, and 1343 children (666 vs 677 randomised to vitamin D vs placebo, respectively) underwent spirometry at 3-year follow-up (figure 1). Table 1 shows participants’ baseline characteristics: overall, mean age was 9.4 years and 49.3% were female. Mean deseasonalised baseline serum 25(OH)D concentration was 29.7 nmol/L (SD 10.5). Baseline characteristics were well balanced between participants randomised to vitamin D versus placebo, both for those in the main trial and for participants contributing data to the exercise and spirometry substudies. Mean serum 25(OH)D concentration at 3-year follow-up was higher in the vitamin D group versus the placebo group (77.4 vs 26.7 nmol/L, respectively; mean difference 50.7 nmol/L, 95% CI 49.7 to 51.4). 8549 participants contributed data to the analysis of grip strength; 8539 to the analysis of long jump distance; 611 to the analysis of cardiorespiratory fitness and 1343 to the analysis of spirometric outcomes (figure 1).

Figure 1

Trial profile. QFT, QuantiFERON-TB Gold in-tube assay.

Table 1

Participants’ baseline characteristics by allocation and overall: main trial, exercise substudy and spirometry substudy

Outcomes

Allocation to vitamin D versus placebo did not influence mean grip strength, either overall or in subgroups defined by male versus female sex, baseline 25(OH)D concentration <25 vs ≥25 nmol/L or estimated calcium intake <500 vs ≥500 mg/day (table 2). Similarly, no effect of the intervention was seen on long jump distance, either overall or by subgroup, after correction for multiple comparison testing (table 3). Among exercise substudy participants, allocation to vitamin D versus placebo did not influence mean VO2peak, either overall or within subgroups defined by male versus female sex, baseline 25(OH)D concentration<25 vs ≥25 nmol/L or estimated calcium intake <500 vs ≥500 mg/day (table 4). Among participants who underwent spirometry at 3-year follow-up, allocation to vitamin D versus placebo did not influence % predicted FEV1, FVC, FEV1/FVC, PEFR or FEF25–75 after correction for multiple comparison testing, either overall or within subgroups defined by male versus female sex, baseline 25(OH)D concentration <25 vs ≥25 nmol/L or estimated calcium intake <500 vs ≥500 mg/day (table 5).

Table 2

Mean grip strength in main trial participants at 1, 2 and 3 years follow-up by allocation: overall and by subgroup

Table 3

Mean long jump distance in main trial participants at 1, 2 and 3 years follow-up by allocation: overall and by subgroup

Table 4

Mean VO2peak in exercise substudy participants at 1, 2 and 3 years follow-up by allocation: overall and by subgroup

Table 5

Spirometric outcomes at 3-year follow-up by allocation: overall and by subgroup

Discussion

We present findings of the largest RCT to investigate the effects of vitamin D on muscle strength, peak oxygen uptake and spirometric lung volumes in children. Vitamin D deficiency was highly prevalent among the study population at baseline, and the intervention was highly effective in elevating serum 25(OH)D concentrations among participants who were randomised to receive it. However, this was not associated with any effect on any physiological outcome investigated, either overall or in subgroups defined by baseline vitamin D status, sex or calcium intake.

Our findings contrast with those of observational studies reporting associations between low vitamin D status and reduced muscle strength and cardiorespiratory fitness,12 13 and chime with results of smaller RCTs, conducted in populations with lower prevalence of vitamin D deficiency, that have yielded null results.18–22 They are also consistent with the lack of effect seen for muscle strength and exercise outcomes in a similar trial conducted in South Africa,38 and for other ‘non-classical’ outcomes in trials of weekly vitamin D supplementation in children.23–25 39–41 Inconsistency between positive findings of observational versus null findings from interventional studies may reflect effects of confounding or bias in the former.42 Lack of subgroup effects in participants with lower baseline vitamin D status or calcium intake suggests that neither of these factors modified the effects of vitamin D supplementation on outcomes investigated. We highlight that our null findings do not have relevance for children with symptomatic vitamin D deficiency since those who were found to have signs of rickets were excluded from the trial, as it would not have been ethical to randomise them to placebo.

Our study has several strengths. The large sample size and low rates of loss to follow-up maximised our power to detect the effects of the intervention, and the high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and low calcium intake at baseline allowed us to rule out effects even in subgroups who might have been expected to derive particular benefit from vitamin D replacement. The intervention was highly effective in elevating serum 25(OH)D concentrations into the physiological range. We also assessed a comprehensive range of outcomes relating to muscle and cardiorespiratory fitness, with assessments at more than one time point to allow detection of any effects that may have differed with varying duration of supplementation.

Our study also has some limitations. Spirometry was assessed at a 3-year follow-up only: accordingly, analyses testing the effect of allocation to vitamin D versus placebo could not be adjusted for baseline. However, we have no reason to suspect a significance imbalance in baseline values between groups, as the randomisation process was effective in distributing all other baseline characteristics evenly between children randomised to intervention versus control arms. We acknowledge that the outcomes investigated in the current study were secondary, rather than primary, outcomes (although prespecified ones), and that multiple tests for statistical significance were performed. Statistically significant findings may, therefore, have arisen as a result of type 1 error. We addressed this issue by applying a correction for multiple comparison testing. We also highlight that our findings relate to effects of weekly vitamin D supplementation specifically. It remains technically possible that daily supplementation might have a different effect, although the fact that weekly supplementation is effective in suppressing serum concentrations of parathyroid hormone and alkaline phosphatase in study participants25 40 suggests that this dosing regimen exerts the same physiological effects as would be expected with daily supplementation. Further trials comparing effects of daily versus weekly supplementation would be needed to resolve this question definitively.

In conclusion, this large multicentre RCT of vitamin D supplementation, administered for 3 years to a population of children with low baseline 25(OH)D concentrations, did not show any effect of the intervention on muscle strength, cardiorespiratory fitness or spirometric outcomes. Taken together with null results from a similarly designed phase 3 RCT conducted in CapeTown, South Africa,38 our study does not suggest a role for weekly oral vitamin D supplementation to enhance muscle strength, peak oxygen uptake or respiratory function in schoolchildren in whom rickets has been excluded.

Data availability statement

Data are available on reasonable request. Anonymised data are available from corresponding authors on reasonable request, subject to terms of IRB and regulatory approval.

Ethics statements

Patient consent for publication

Ethics approval

This study involves human participants and the study was approved by institutional review boards of the Mongolian Ministry of Health, Mongolian National University and Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health (IRB # 14-0513). Participants gave informed consent to participate in the study before taking part.

Acknowledgments

We thank all the children who participated in the trial, and their parents and guardians. We also thank independent members of the Data Safety Monitoring Board (Professor SM Fortune and Dr P.L. Williams, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; Professors MF Holick and CR Horsburgh, Boston University; Professor P Enkhbaatar, University of Texas and Dr E. Chadraa, Minnesota State University); independent members of the Trial Steering Committee (Professors W.C. Willett, Edward L. Giovannucci and B.R. Bloom, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; Dr N Naranbat, Gyals Medical Laboratory, Ulaanbaatar; and late Dr D Malchinkhuu, National Center for Maternal and Child Health of Mongolia); board members at the Mongolian Health Initiative (Dr J Tuyatsetseg, Mongolian University of Science and Technology; Dr J Amarsanaa, Happy Veritas Laboratory, Ulaanbaatar; Drs P Erkhembulgan and G Batbaatar, Mongolian National University of Medical Sciences; Professor M.C. Elliott, Harvard University and Mr Ts. Munh-Orgil, Member of the Mongolian Parliament); and the following individuals for advice and helpful discussions: Dr Winthrop Burr (Anadyne Psychotherapy Inc) and Dr Masae Kawamura at Qiagen, USA.

References

Supplementary materials

  • Supplementary Data

    This web only file has been produced by the BMJ Publishing Group from an electronic file supplied by the author(s) and has not been edited for content.

Footnotes

  • Contributors DG and ARM conceived the study and contributed to study design and protocol development; SH contributed to design of outcome assessments of muscle strength and peak oxygen uptake. DG led on trial implementation, with support from UB, GG, UA, TT, KD, ETserenkhuu, SE, NE, C-E A, YT, TB, EG and EP. ETsendjav performed and supervised measurements of serum 25(OH)D concentrations. DG and ARM drafted the statistical analysis plan. DG, UB, ET and SE managed data. DG, ARM and DAJ accessed and verified the data underlying the study. DAJ conducted statistical analyses. ARM, DG and DAJ wrote the first draft of the trial report. All other authors made substantive comments thereon and approved the final version for submission. ARM is the guarantor.

  • Funding This study was supported by an award from the US National Institutes of Health, ref. 1R01HL122624-01.

  • Competing interests ARM declares receipt of funding in the last 36 months to support vitamin D research from the following companies who manufacture or sell vitamin D supplements: Pharma Nord, DSM Nutritional Products, Thornton & Ross and Hyphens Pharma. ARM also declares receipt of vitamin D capsules for clinical trial use from Pharma Nord, Synergy Biologics and Cytoplan; support for attending meetings from Pharma Nord and Abiogen Pharma; receipt of consultancy fees from DSM Nutritional Products and Qiagen; receipt of a speaker fee from the Linus Pauling Institute; participation on Data and Safety Monitoring Boards for the VITALITY trial (Vitamin D for Adolescents with HIV to reduce musculoskeletal morbidity and immunopathology, Pan African Clinical Trials Registry ref PACTR20200989766029) and the Trial of Vitamin D and Zinc Supplementation for Improving Treatment Outcomes Among COVID-19 Patients in India (ClinicalTrials.gov ref NCT04641195); and unpaid work as a Programme Committee member for the Vitamin D Workshop. All other authors declare that they have no competing interests.

  • Patient and public involvement Patients and/or the public were involved in the design, or conduct, or reporting, or dissemination plans of this research. Refer to the Methods section for further details.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; internally peer reviewed.

  • Supplemental material This content has been supplied by the author(s). It has not been vetted by BMJ Publishing Group Limited (BMJ) and may not have been peer-reviewed. Any opinions or recommendations discussed are solely those of the author(s) and are not endorsed by BMJ. BMJ disclaims all liability and responsibility arising from any reliance placed on the content. Where the content includes any translated material, BMJ does not warrant the accuracy and reliability of the translations (including but not limited to local regulations, clinical guidelines, terminology, drug names and drug dosages), and is not responsible for any error and/or omissions arising from translation and adaptation or otherwise.