APostmenopausal osteoporosis
Adjunct
A required component of combination therapy for postmenopausal osteoporosis together with calcium and antiresorptive or anabolic agents (bisphosphonates, denosumab, teriparatide). USPSTF and meta-analyses show that combined calcium 1,000–1,200 mg and vitamin D 800–1,000 IU daily reduces hip fracture risk by 16% in at-risk populations. Vitamin D monotherapy in patients with normal bone density does not reduce fracture risk.
Vitamin D monotherapy is not indicated for fracture prevention in pre- or postmenopausal women without osteoporosis.
ARickets in children
First line
Cornerstone treatment and prevention of rickets in children. Prophylactic dose for term newborns is 400 IU daily from the first days of life, 800–1,000 IU daily for preterm infants. Therapeutic dose for established rickets is 2,000–5,000 IU daily for 30–45 days followed by prophylactic dosing. Efficacy is supported by decades of paediatric practice and is reflected in the AAP and Russian Paediatric Society guidelines.
In children with concomitant gastrointestinal disease (coeliac disease, cystic fibrosis, short bowel syndrome) doses are individualised with 25(OH)D monitoring.
AVitamin D deficiency
First line
First-line therapy for correcting vitamin D deficiency and insufficiency in adults. Standard loading regimens are 50,000 IU weekly for 8 weeks or 6,000 IU daily, followed by maintenance 1,500–2,000 IU daily. Target 25(OH)D is at least 30 ng/mL per the Endocrine Society and Russian clinical guidelines. Doses are 2–3 times higher in obesity, malabsorption syndromes, and in patients on anticonvulsants.
In chronic kidney disease colecalciferol is preferred over active metabolites (alfacalcidol, calcitriol) for initial therapy. In sarcoidosis and other granulomatous diseases, only with monitoring of serum calcium.
BFalls prevention in older adults
Individual decision
In adults over 65 with confirmed vitamin D deficiency, 800–1,000 IU daily reduces the risk of falls in several meta-analyses. The 2018 USPSTF update found the effect insufficient in patients without deficiency and withdrew the prior recommendation. The decision is individualised based on 25(OH)D level, physical activity, and other fall risk factors.
Doses above 4,000 IU daily without clinical indications are not recommended – dedicated RCTs showed a paradoxical increase in fall risk.
DAutoimmune disease prevention
Individual decision
The VITAL trial (BMJ 2022) showed a 22% reduction in autoimmune disease incidence in adults 50+ after 5 years of vitamin D 2,000 IU daily. The finding comes from a single cohort, has not been reproduced in other RCTs, and the effect accrues over years. International rheumatology societies do not recommend vitamin D as primary prevention of autoimmune disease.
DProphylaxis of acute respiratory infections
Not recommended
The 2021 Cochrane review (46 RCTs, more than 75,000 participants) showed a modest effect on acute respiratory infections – about 2% absolute reduction, more pronounced in patients with baseline deficiency. WHO, NICE, and CDC do not include vitamin D in respiratory infection prophylaxis protocols. Routine prescribing in patients without deficiency is not justified.
Vaccination and hand hygiene remain the cornerstones of respiratory infection prevention.
FAnti-aging and longevity (marketed indication)
Not recommended
The VITAL trial (NEJM 2019, more than 25,000 participants) did not show any reduction in cardiovascular or all-cause mortality from vitamin D 2,000 IU daily over 5 years. The 2014 Cochrane meta-analysis also found no effect on all-cause mortality in adults. International guidelines do not recommend vitamin D for slowing ageing or extending lifespan.