Vitamin D and COVID-19: Clinical Evidence and Immunological Insights
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Immune Mechanisms of Vitamin D in Viral Infections
- ✓
- The antimicrobial effects of vitamin D include both viral replication suppression and protection of respiratory tract epithelial barriers [15]. Antimicrobial peptides, including defensins and cathelicidin, develop from vitamin D activation, improve lung mucosal protection, and directly destroy viruses [16].
- ✓
- Sufficiently high vitamin D levels tend to inhibit overactive inflammatory responses in bodily systems. The use of vitamin D alters T-cell inflammation by turning dangerous pro-inflammatory Th1 and Th17 cells into safer anti-inflammatory Th2 and Treg cell responses [17]. When vitamin D levels rise, the immune system releases fewer pro-inflammatory cytokines, like IL-6 and TNF-α, while increasing the production of anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-10, thus stopping the hyperactive “cytokine storm”. Active vitamin D modifies immune response control mechanisms to stabilize inflammatory processes, thereby preventing dangerous cytokine storm development [18] (Figure 1).
- ✓
- The immune system cells, like macrophages and dendritic cells, that possess a vitamin D receptor undertake the local transformation of 25(OH)D to active 1,25(OH)_2D. Such local activity enables vitamin D to enhance innate immune responses [19]. The signaling mechanisms of vitamin D help macrophages fight pathogens while simultaneously controlling their inflammatory release. Research demonstrates that vitamin D stimulates both regulatory T-cell population magnitude and activity, which helps regulate immune system reactions [20].
- ✓
- When vitamin D controls natural immune activation and helps to resolve inflammatory reactions, it diminishes the level of lung tissue damage. Patients with COVID-19 develop severe illness when their bodies display elevated neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratios combined with excessive inflammation. A pilot study revealed that patients given vitamin D treatment (calcifediol) had an increased number of lymphocytes and reduced neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio values, which showed that they had better immune markers of severe COVID-19 [21]. The immunomodulatory properties of vitamin D potentially allow for milder inflammatory damage to the body while fighting infection (Figure 2).
4. Clinical Trials on Vitamin D and COVID-19 Outcomes
5. Dosage Recommendations and Guidelines
6. Vitamin D Status and Severe COVID-19 Outcomes
7. Role of Vitamin D in Long COVID Patients
8. Highlights
- High-dose vitamin D supplementation has not been recommended as a routine treatment for preventing or treating COVID-19 because researchers lack sufficient proof of its effectiveness.
- The relationship between vitamin D deficiency with levels under 20 ng/mL in serum 25(OH)D and extreme COVID-19 outcomes remains under debate regarding any causal connection.
- Patients with long COVID show widespread vitamin D deficiency patterns, which concurrently worsen all their persistent symptoms, including fatigue, muscle weakness, cognitive impairment, and mood disturbances.
- Evidence is insufficient to draw firm conclusions on whether vitamin D deficiency correction through supplementation helps long COVID patients, irrespective of muscle pain symptoms and fatigue, yet research using randomized controlled trials continues to provide insights into this topic.
9. Limitations of This Review
10. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
IU | International Unit |
ICU | Intensive Care Unit |
RCT | Randomized Controlled Trial |
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Study Title | Registry ID | Phase | Study Type | Recruitment Status | Results Posted | Registry Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Efficacy of Vitamin D Treatment in Patients Diagnosed with Pneumonia who Require Hospital Admission and have Vitamin D Deficiency and a Positive Diagnosis for SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) | EudraCT 2020-001960-28 | – (Not stated) | I | Ongoing | No | EU CTR [35] |
Preventing Disease Aggravation in COVID-19 by High Dose Vitamin D: a Randomized Trial (COVIT-D) | EudraCT 2020-001793-30 | – (Not stated) | I | Prematurely Ended | No | EU CTR [35] |
Usefulness of Vitamin D on Morbidity and Mortality of SARS-CoV-2 Infection (COVID-19) at the Central University Hospital of Asturias | EudraCT 2020-002274-28 | – (Not stated) | I | Completed | No | EU CTR [35] |
COVID-19 and Vitamin D Supplementation: a Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial of High Dose versus Standard Dose Vitamin 3 in High-Risk COVID-19 Patients | EudraCT 2020-001602-34 | – (Not stated) | I | Completed | No | EU CTR [35] |
COVID-19 Prophylaxis with Hydroxychloroquine, Vitamin D, and Zinc Supplementation in Danish Nursing Home Residents—a Randomized Controlled Trial | EudraCT 2020-001363-85 | – (Not stated) | I | Prematurely Ended | Yes (Posted) | EU CTR [35] |
A Randomized Clinical Trial (IIIb) of Efficacy of a Single Dose of Tocilizumab or a Combination of Tocilizumab plus Vitamin D for the Treatment of COVID-19 Hyperimmune Complications | EudraCT 2020-001903-17 | IIIb | I | Ongoing | No | EU CTR [35] |
Phase III Randomized Open-Label Trial to Evaluate High-Dose Cholecalciferol (Vitamin D3) in Patients with COVID-19 Pneumonia | EudraCT 2020-002312-43 | III | I | Completed | No | EU CTR [35] |
COVitaminD Trial: Prevention of Complications from COVID-19 in Cancer Patients Under Active Treatment | EudraCT 2020-002119-23 | – (Not stated) | I | Prematurely Ended | No | EU CTR [35] |
Multicenter, Double-blind, Randomized Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy of Calcifediol Soft Capsules versus Placebo in Reducing Hospital Admissions in Patients with COVID-19 | EudraCT 2021-000316-31 | – (Not stated) | I | Prematurely Ended | Yes (Posted) | EU CTR [35] |
Prevention and Treatment with Calcifediol of Coronavirus COVID-19–Induced Acute Respiratory Syndrome (COVIDIOL) | EudraCT 2020-001717-20 | – (Not stated) | I | Prematurely Ended | No | EU CTR [35] |
Prevention and Treatment with Calcifediol of COVID-19–Induced Acute Respiratory Syndrome (COVIDIOL trial, Spain) [24] | NCT04366908 | 2 | I | Recruiting (ongoing) | No | CT.gov [36] |
Oral 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 and COVID-19 (Iran) | NCT04386850 | 2/3 | I | Recruiting (ongoing) | No | CT.gov [37] |
Evaluation of the Relationship Between Zinc, Vitamin D, and B12 Levels in COVID-19-Positive Pregnant Women (Turkey) | NCT04407572 | N/A | O | Completed | No | CT.gov [38,39] |
International ALLIANCE Study of Therapies to Prevent Progression of COVID-19 (includes Vitamin D3 arm) | NCT04395768 | 2 | I | Recruiting ongoing | No | CT.gov [40,41] |
Vitamin D for COVID-19 Trial (VIVID—U.S.) | NCT04536298 | 3 | I | Completed | No (No results posted) | CT.gov [42] |
Effect of Vitamin D on Morbidity and Mortality of the COVID-19 (COVID-VIT-D Trial) (Spain/Argentina) | NCT04552951 | 3 | I | Completed (status last known) | No (No results posted) | CT.gov [43,44] |
Prevention of COVID-19 With Oral Vitamin D Supplementation (CORONAVIT trial, UK) | NCT04579640 | 3 | I | Completed | No (No results posted) | CT.gov [22,45] |
High-Dose Vitamin D Supplementation in COVID-19 Patients (Angers trial, France) | EudraCT Number: 2020-001602-34 | 3 | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [46] |
The LEAD COVID-19 Trial: Low-risk, Early Aspirin, and Vitamin D to Reduce COVID-19 Hospitalizations (LEAD COVID-19, USA) | NCT04363840 | 2 | I | Withdrawn (lack of funding) | No | CT.gov [47,48] |
COVID-19 and High-dose Vitamin D Supplementation in High-Risk Older Patients (COVIT-TRIAL, Europe) | NCT04344041 | 3 | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [27,46,49] |
Pilot Study of Vitamin D in COVID-19 Patients (single-arm trial, USA) | NCT04407286 | N/A | I (single-arm) | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [50,51] |
Trial of Combination Therapy to Treat COVID-19 Infection ProgenaBiome | NCT04482686 | 1 | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [52] |
Vitamin D Supplementation in Patients With COVID-19 (Brazil) | NCT04449718 | 3 | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [53,54,55,56] |
High Dose Vitamin-D Substitution in Patients With COVID-19: a Randomized Controlled, Multi-Center Study (VitCov) | NCT04525820 | N/A | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [57,58] |
Efficacy of Vitamin D Supplementation to Prevent the Risk of Acquiring COVID-19 in Healthcare Workers (COVID-19) | NCT04535791 | 3 | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [28,59] |
Efficacy of Vitamin D Treatment in Pediatric Patients Hospitalized by COVID-19 (Mexico) | NCT04502667 | 3 | I | Completed (status last known) | No | CT.gov [60] |
Vitamin D, Magnesium, and B12 in COVID-19 (DMB) (Singapore cohort study) | – (No NCT, local study) | N/A | O | Completed | – | [61] |
Hydroxychloroquine, Vitamin C, Vitamin D, and Zinc for COVID-19 Prevention (HELP COVID-19 Trial, USA) | NCT04335084 | 2 | I | Active, not recruiting | No | CT.gov [62] |
High-Dose vs. Standard-Dose Vitamin D3 in Patients with COVID-19 (SHADE trial, India) | CTRI/2020/06/026189 (no NCT) | – | I | Completed | Published only | CT.gov [26,63] |
Prevention of COVID-19 With Oral Vitamin D Supplemental Therapy in Essential Healthcare Teams (PROTECT) | NCT04483635 | 3 | I | Completed | Published | CT.gov [64,65] |
Vitamin D and Zinc Supplementation for Improving Treatment Outcomes Among COVID-19 Patients in India | NCT04641195 | 3 | I | Completed | Published | CT.gov [66,67] |
Vitamin D Supplementation in Patients With COVID-19 | NCT04449718 | N/A | I | Completed | Published | CT.gov [23,53] |
Vitamin D and COVID-19 Management (Canada) | NCT04385940 | 3 | I | Completed | No | CT.gov [68] |
Investigating the Role of Vitamin D in the Morbidity of COVID-19 Patients (UK) | NCT04386044 | N/A | I | Completed | No | CT.gov [69] |
Baseline Vitamin D Deficiency and COVID-19 Disease Severity (USA) | NCT04628000 | N/A | O | Completed | No | CT.gov [70] |
Increased Risk of Severe Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Patients with Vitamin D Deficiency (COVIT-D, Spain) | NCT04403932 | N/A | O | Completed | No | CT.gov [71] |
Vitamin D Status and Immune-inflammatory Status in Different UK Populations With COVID-19 Infection | NCT04519034 | N/A | O | Active, not recruiting | No | CT.gov [72] |
Should Ranges of Vitamin D be Redefined to Prevent or Treat Viral Infections? (Turkey) | NCT04394390 | N/A | O | Completed | No | CT.gov [73] |
Cholecalciferol to Improve the Outcomes of COVID-19 Patients (CARED) | NCT04411446 | 4 | O | Unknown status | No | CT.gov [29,74] |
Vitamin D on Prevention and Treatment of COVID-19 (COVITD-19) | NCT04334005 | N/A | I | Unknown status | No | CT.gov [75] |
Population | Recommended Vitamin D Intake | Purpose/Comments | Evidence Level/ Guideline Source |
---|---|---|---|
General population | 400–800 IU (10–20 µg) daily | Maintain general health and immune support | CDC, WHO, NHS guidelines |
At-risk groups (elderly, limited sun exposure, chronic illnesses) | 800–2000 IU (20–50 µg) daily | Ensure adequate vitamin D status, potentially reducing severe respiratory infections | NICE (UK), NIH guidelines |
Hospitalized COVID-19 patients | No routine high-dose supplementation recommended | Correct vitamin D deficiency if present (typically 1000–2000 IU/day or higher doses under medical supervision) | NIH COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines |
COVID-19 prevention (general) | No evidence-based recommendation beyond general intake | Maintaining adequate vitamin D levels might indirectly support immune health | CDC, NIH COVID-19 Treatment Guidelines |
Safe upper limit for adults | 4000 IU (100 µg) per day | Avoid potential toxicity and hypercalcemia | Institute of Medicine (IOM), NIH guidelines |
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Caliman-Sturdza, O.A.; Gheorghita, R.E.; Soldanescu, I. Vitamin D and COVID-19: Clinical Evidence and Immunological Insights. Life 2025, 15, 733. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15050733
Caliman-Sturdza OA, Gheorghita RE, Soldanescu I. Vitamin D and COVID-19: Clinical Evidence and Immunological Insights. Life. 2025; 15(5):733. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15050733
Chicago/Turabian StyleCaliman-Sturdza, Olga Adriana, Roxana Elena Gheorghita, and Iuliana Soldanescu. 2025. "Vitamin D and COVID-19: Clinical Evidence and Immunological Insights" Life 15, no. 5: 733. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15050733
APA StyleCaliman-Sturdza, O. A., Gheorghita, R. E., & Soldanescu, I. (2025). Vitamin D and COVID-19: Clinical Evidence and Immunological Insights. Life, 15(5), 733. https://doi.org/10.3390/life15050733