Saturday, October 31, 2020

1087 Weer een moslim-aanslag. In Frankrijk. Hoe werkt dat?

 

Ha ha ha ha ! 

"Iemand vermoorden door middel van social media, ha ha ha ,  wil je nog eens uitleggen hoe dat gaat ?"

"Ja, natuurlijk.  Ik werkte bij Darpa  ( Amerikaans onderzoek oorlogvoering) en daar hebben we dat bedacht:  Je moet wat onstabiele figuren benaderen en die eenzijdige informatie voeren. En dan stimuleren dat ze de man die jìj  dood wil hebben,  gaan vermoorden !  Ha ha ha ! "

De eerste 5 minuten ongeveer:


=============

Even terug in de tijd....1985 .... 

Richard Perle en vrienden sluizen honderden miljoenen 'hulpgeld'  door naar Islamitische landen.  30% van het geld wordt besteed aan de bouw van madrassa's, waar eenvoudige jongens opgeleid worden  met fundamentalistische moslim-ideeen.  

Een vreemde ambitie, nietwaar:  joodse Amerikanen die  miljoenen besteden om boerenpummels in de woestijn op te voeden tot jihadisten. 

Niet als je begrijpt dat die jongens later twee taken moeten verrichten:  

1) Alle moderne, sterke, seculiere moslimlanden kapot maken.

2) De Islam een roetzwart imago bezorgen in de Westerse media, zodat Israel kan doen wat het wil.

 

 

ISIS strijder herstelt in Israelisch hospitaal en krijgt bezoek van Netanyahu.

   =========================

 The Saker is er van overtuigd dat de recente moslim-aanslagen door joodse lieden  zijn bekokstoofd. 

Het zou zomaar kunnen. 

Maar het  kan ook een gevolg zijn van het werk van Richard Perle,  of het gevolg van de ellende en oorlogen en vernederingen  waar moslimlanden de laatste 20 jaar onder moeten lijden, ellende die grotendeels in Washington en Tel Aviv is geproduceerd. 

Hier de Saker.    

Ik heb het vertaald met behulp van: https://www.deepl.com/translator



 

Wie profiteert van de aanslagen situatie in Frankrijk. ?

 

Ik zal niet eens de moeite nemen om het hier allemaal te herhalen, wie geïnteresseerd is in mijn mening over deze hele Charlie Hebdo canard kan hier mijn artikel "I am NOT Charlie" lezen: https://thesaker.is/i-am-not-charlie/

 

Nee, wat ik wil doen is een eenvoudige vraag stellen: denkt u dat de Franse leiders gewoon dom, suïcidaal of naïef zijn?  Ik geef toe dat ze noch dom, noch suïcidaal, noch naïef zijn.  In feite maken ze gebruik van een veelgebruikte methode, die met enige variaties deze ingredienten heeft:

- Infiltreer een of andere pseudo-islamitische bende moordenaars (letterlijk!)

- Houd ze onder nauwlettend toezicht, zogenaamd voor de bestrijding van het terrorisme.

- Binnen de groep probeer U uw eigen  informanten te promoten

- Laat uw analisten aan de volgende vraag werken: "Hoe kunnen we deze gekken het beste uitlokken tot een verdomde terroristische daad?"

- Als het plan eenmaal is besloten, voer je het gewoon uit, bijvoorbeeld door het organiseren van de publicatie van fantastische karikaturen van de profeet...

- Zodra de moordenaars toeslaan, de Islam de schuld geven en daar niet meer over ophouden.

- Tegen die tijd heb je het grootste deel van de immense moslimwereld woedend gemaakt en kun je er zeker van zijn dat het proces in gang is gezet en vanzelf zal doorgaan.  U hoeft niks meer te doen. ( JV:  Jonge mannen zijn van nature strijdlustig, dus U hoeft ze niet voortdurend in hun hart  te kwetsen . Er zijn er altijd wel die dan geweld gaan plegen. )  

- Laat uw propagandamachine verklaren dat de Islam onverenigbaar is met de westerse beschaving (wat dat ook betekent in 2020, zowel Descartes als Conchita Wurst neem ik aan...).

- Stoprt wat krokodillentranen als de moordenaars een volledig onschuldige christelijke toeschouwer vermoorden.

- En kondig een nieuwe kruistocht aan tegen het "islamisme" (ook een vage en, eerlijk gezegd, nietszeggende term!) en hard op te treden tegen echte moslimgemeenschappen en -ideeën terwijl je de "goede terroristen" die nu je eigen, persoonlijke, cutthroats zijn geworden, liefdevol blijft bewapenen, trainen, financieren en leiden.


Cui bono? (Wie profiteert… ? )

Iedereen die iets weet over de politieke realiteit in Frankrijk zal onmiddellijk weten in wiens belang dit alles is en wie er achter zit: de zionistische machtsstructuur in Frankrijk (CRIF, UEJF, enz. en de Israëli's).  Zij hebben een totale controle over Macron en over de hele politieke klasse, met inbegrip van Marine LePen.

Wie anders had de "mooie" term "Islamo-Fascisme" kunnen verzinnen?!

Dit is een nieuw fenomeen, een nieuwe ideologie en een nieuwe strategie, die Alain Soral "Nationaal Zionisme" noemt en die ik hier in enkele details heb besproken: https://thesaker.is/the-great-fraud-of-national-zionism/

 

In het begin (van Ahad Ha'am, Theodor Herzl, Ze'ev Jabotinsky, enz.) was het zionisme vroeger grotendeels seculier en nationalistisch, maar later, na de Tweede Wereldoorlog, werd het erg links en nog steeds seculier (Ben-Gurion, Shlomo Lavi, Golda Meir).  Het moderne zionisme is echter zowel racistisch als religieus - het perfecte voorbeeld zijn de Amerikaanse neocons.  Het is ook een meedogenloze en genocidale ideologie die iets werkelijk origineels heeft gecreëerd: Goddelijk racisme, iets wat, voor zover ik weet, geen enkele andere religie belijdt (tot zover de onwetende en, eerlijk gezegd, gewoon domme begrippen van "Abrahamitische godsdiensten" of, erger nog, "Joods-Christelijke waarden"!)  Het nationale zionisme is de volgende fase van het zionisme - het is rabiaat "conservatief" (alleen in Neocon-zin, natuurlijk!) en het voedt zich parasitair met welke nationalistische ideologie de lokale patriottische goyim ook geneigd is (het beste voorbeeld daarvan zijn de zogenaamde "christelijke zionisten" in de Verenigde Staten).

Maar hier is de demonische "schoonheid" van dit alles: in een maatschappij als de Franse hoeven de zionisten hun valse vlaggen niet eens te micromanagen: met genoeg ongeschoolde en moorddadige pseudo-moslim cutthroats en genoeg hondsdolle secularisten die de gelovigen willen beledigen - een soort van gewelddadige explosie zal *onvermijdelijk* gebeuren!

Op dit moment, tussen de gênante Yellow Vests-beweging ( JV: Wat bedoelt de Saker met genant?   Genant voor d e regering? ) , de afbrokkelende economie, de massale toestroom, golf na golf, van ongewenste en onaangepaste immigranten en de daaruit voortvloeiende sociale spanningen, zit het Franse regime diep in de problemen.  Voeg daar de COVID-pandemie aan toe die net de chaos en de woede heeft verergerd en eindig met een totaal gebrek aan successen op het gebied van het buitenlands beleid en u zult meteen zien waarom dit regime zo'n "vaderlandslievende reactie" nodig had.

Tot slot is er de beproefde methode om uw eigen bevolking in een staat van catatonische acceptatie van alles en nog wat te laten schrikken in de naam van "veiligheid".

We zien het allemaal in Frankrijk vandaag, we hebben het eerder gezien in het Verenigd Koninkrijk, en ook in België.  En, wees gerust, we zullen in de toekomst nog veel meer van dergelijke slachtpartijen zien.  De enige manier om deze "terroristische" aanslagen echt te stoppen is om hun sponsors te laten zien dat we weten wie ze zijn en dat we begrijpen wat ze doen.  Kortom, deze aanslagen zullen doorgaan.

De Saker

 

 

 

 


Friday, October 30, 2020

1086 Presentje voor Maarten Keulemans, Pieter Klok en alle anderen die denken dat ZIJ de waarheid in pacht hebben.

 

Het Vit D - onderzoek dat behoorlijk bersproken wordt en nu zelfs de MSM haalt, her en der: zie onder. 

Maar er zijn al meer dan 6 maanden lang enorm overtuigende berichten over de invloed van Vitamine D.  

Ze werden met alle geweld weg gedrukt.  Een andere verklaring kan ik er niet voor bedenken.

Hier een onderzoek uit dePhilipijnen dat begin april is gepubliceeerd. 

De afbeelding ( grafiek)  zegt alles,  maar ik kan hem alleen tonen in een video: Minuut 3.35 . Als U de video stil zet ziet U:  groen  zijn de mensen die meer dan 30 nanogram vit D inhun bloed hadden.  Bij heb verloopt de ziekte mild. 

Rood zijn de mensen die heel weinig Vit D in hun bloed hadden: bijna allemaal worden ze ernstig ziek van Corona. 

Dan nu het recente onderzoek: 

Artsen geven soms aan oudjes in het verpleeghuis 

een injectie met 80.000 units vitamine D, in één keer.  ( een 'bolus'). 

Welnu: oudjes die zo'n injectie kregen, een week voor ze Corona kregen, of zelfs na enkele dagen Corona te hebben,  DIE oudjes hadden 89% minder kans om dood te gaan door de ziekte.  


Vitamin D and survival in COVID-19 patients: A quasi-experimental study

Highlights

Vitamin D may be a central biological determinant of COVID-19 outcomes.

Bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19 was associated with less severe COVID-19 in frail elderly.

Bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19 was associated with better survival rate in frail elderly.

Randomized controlled trials are expected to firmly conclude the effect of vitamin D supplementation on COVID-19 prognosis.

Abstract

Vitamin D may be a central biological determinant of COVID-19 outcomes. The objective of this quasi-experimental study was to determine whether bolus vitamin D3 supplementation taken during or just before COVID-19 was effective in improving survival among frail elderly nursing-home residents with COVID-19. Sixty-six residents with COVID-19 from a French nursing-home were included in this quasi-experimental study. The “Intervention group” was defined as those having received bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during COVID-19 or in the preceding month, and the “Comparator group” corresponded to all other participants. The primary and secondary outcomes were COVID-19 mortality and Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement (OSCI) score in acute phase, respectively. Age, gender, number of drugs daily taken, functional abilities, albuminemia, use of corticosteroids and/or hydroxychloroquine and/or antibiotics (i.e., azithromycin or rovamycin), and hospitalization for COVID-19 were used as potential confounders. The Intervention (n = 57; mean ± SD, 87.7 ± 9.3years; 79%women) and Comparator (n = 9; mean,87.4 ± 7.2years; 67%women) groups were comparable at baseline, as were the COVID-19 severity and the use of dedicated COVID-19 drugs. The mean follow-up time was 36 ± 17days. 82.5% of participants in the Intervention group survived COVID-19, compared to only 44.4% in the Comparator group (P = 0.023). The full-adjusted hazard ratio for mortality according to vitamin D3 supplementation was HR = 0.11[95%CI:0.03;0.48],P = 0.003. Kaplan-Meier distributions showed that Intervention group had longer survival time than Comparator group (log-rank P = 0.002). Finally, vitamin D3 supplementation was inversely associated with OSCI score for COVID-19 (β=-3.84[95%CI:-6.07;-1.62], P = 0.001). In conclusion, bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19 was associated in frail elderly with less severe COVID-19 and better survival rate.

Keywords

COVID-19
SARS-CoV-2
vitamin D
therapeutics
quasi-experimental study
older adults

1. INTRODUCTION

Since December 2019, the COVID-19 caused by SARS-CoV-2 is spreading worldwide from China, affecting millions of people and leaving thousands of dead, mostly in older adults. With the lack of effective therapy, chemoprevention and vaccination [1], focusing on the immediate repurposing of existing drugs gives hope of curbing the pandemic. Importantly, a most recent genomics-guided tracing of the SARS-CoV-2 targets in human cells identified vitamin D among the three top-scoring molecules manifesting potential infection mitigation patterns through their effects on gene expression [2]. In particular, by activating or repressing several genes in the promoter region of which it binds to the vitamin D response element [3], vitamin D may theoretically prevent or improve COVID-19 adverse outcomes by regulating (i) the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), (ii) the innate and adaptive cellular immunity, and (iii) the physical barriers [4]. Consistently, epidemiology shows that hypovitaminosis D is more common from October to March at northern latitudes above 20 degrees [3], which corresponds precisely to the latitudes with the highest lethality rates of COVID-19 during the first months of winter 2020 [1]. In line with this, significant inverse associations were found in 20 European countries between serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D) concentration and the number of COVID-19 cases, as well as with COVID-19 mortality [5]. This suggests that increasing serum 25(OH)D concentration may improve the prognosis of COVID-19. However, no randomized controlled trial (RCT) has tested the effect of vitamin D supplements on COVID-19 outcomes yet. We had the opportunity to examine the association between the use of vitamin D3 supplements and COVID-19 mortality in a sample of frail elderly nursing-home residents infected with SARS-CoV-2. The main objective of this quasi-experimental study was to determine whether bolus vitamin D3 supplementation taken during or just before COVID-19 was effective in improving survival among frail elderly COVID-19 patients living in nursing-home. The secondary objective was to determine whether this intervention was effective in limiting the clinical severity of the infection.

2. MATERIAL AND METHODS

2.1. Study population

The study consisted in a quasi-experimental study in a middle-sized nursing-home in Rhône, South-East of France, the residents of which were largely affected by COVID-19 in March- April 2020 (N = 96, including n = 66 with COVID-19). Data were retrospectively collected from the residents’ records of the nursing-home.

The nursing-home is dedicated to residents with physical disabilities, major neurocognitive and psychiatric disorders. The facility includes 56 single rooms and 21 double rooms, along with communal dining and activity areas. There are no closed units. All residents were allowed to move around the building until 21 March 2020, when social distancing and other preventive measures were implemented. Residents were isolated in their rooms with no communal meals or group activities. No visitors, including families, were allowed in the nursing-home since 10 March 2020. Enhanced hygiene measures were implemented, including cleaning and disinfection of frequently touched surfaces, permanent face masks, and additional hand hygiene stations for staff members.

The inclusion criteria for the present analysis were as follows: 1) residents with clinically obvious or diagnosed COVID-19 with RT-PCR in March-April 2020; 2) data available on the treatments received, including vitamin D supplementation, since the diagnosis of COVID-19 and during the previous month at least; 3) data available on the vital status and COVID-19 evolution as of May 15, 2020; 4) no objection from the resident and/or relatives to the use of anonymized clinical and biological data for research purposes. Sixty-six residents had COVID-19 during the study period. They all met the other inclusion criteria and were included in the present analysis.

2.2. Intervention: bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19

All residents in the nursing-home receive chronic vitamin D supplementation with regular maintenance boluses (single oral dose of 80,000 IU vitamin D3 every 2-3 months), without systematically performing serum control test as recommended in French nursing-homes [6] due to the very high prevalence of hypovitaminosis D reaching 90-100% in this population [7]. Here, the "Intervention group" was defined as all COVID-19 residents who received an oral bolus of 80,000 IU vitamin D3 either in the week following the suspicion or diagnosis of COVID-19, or during the previous month. The "Comparator group" corresponded to all other COVID-19 residents who did not receive any recent vitamin D supplementation. None received D2 or intramuscular supplements. All medications were dispended and supervised by a nurse.

2.3. Primary outcome: COVID-19 mortality

The primary outcome was mortality of COVID-19 residents during follow-up. Follow-up started from the day of COVID-19 diagnosis for each patient, and continued until May 15, 2020, or until death if applicable.

2.4. Secondary outcome: OSCI score for COVID-19 in acute phase

The secondary outcome was the score on the World Health Organization’s Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement (OSCI) for COVID-19 [8]. The score was calculated by the geriatrician of the nursing-home during the most severe acute phase of COVID-19 for each patient. The OSCI distinguishes between several levels of COVID-19 clinical severity according to the outcomes and dedicated treatments required, with a score ranging from 0 (benign) to 8 (death). A score of 4 corresponds to the introduction of oxygen (nasal oxygen catheter or oral nasal mask), and a score of 6 to intubation and invasive ventilation [8].

2.5. Covariables

Age, gender, number of drugs daily taken, functional abilities, nutritional status, COVID-19 treatment with corticosteroids and/or hydroxychloroquine and/or dedicated antibiotics, and hospitalization for COVID-19 were used as potential confounders. The number of drugs usually taken per day was recovered from prescriptions in the nursing-home and served as a measure of the burden of disease, as previously reported [9]. The use of corticosteroids and/or hydroxychloroquine and/or dedicated antibiotics (i.e., azithromycin or rovamycin) were noted from prescriptions in the nursing-home or during hospitalization, as appropriate. Functional abilities prior to COVID-19 were measured from 1 to 6 (best) with the Iso-Resources Groups (GIR) [10]. Finally, the prognosis related to the nutritional status prior to COVID-19 was evaluated using the last measure of serum albumin concentration during the past semester, as appropriate [11].

2.6. Statistical analysis

Participants’ characteristics were summarized using means and standard deviations (SD) or frequencies and percentages, as appropriate. As the number of observations was higher than 40, comparisons were not affected by the shape of the error distribution and no transform was applied [12]. First, comparisons between participants separated into Intervention and Comparator groups were performed using Mann-Whitney U test or the Chi-square test or Fisher test, as appropriate; and then according to mortality. Secondly, a full-adjusted Cox regression was used to examine the associations of mortality (dependent variable) with bolus vitamin D3 supplements and covariables (independent variables). The model produces a survival function that provides the probability of death at a given time for the characteristics supplied for the independent variables. Third, the elapsed time to death was studied by survival curves computed according to Kaplan-Meier method and compared by log-rank test. Finally, univariate and multiple linear regressions were used to examine the association of bolus vitamin D3 supplementation (independent variable) with OSCI score (dependent variable), while adjusting for potential confounders. P-values<0.05 were considered significant. All statistics were performed using SPSS (v23.0, IBM Corporation, Chicago, IL) and SAS® version 9.4 software (Sas Institute Inc).

2.7. Standard Protocol Approvals, Registrations, and Patient Consents

The study was conducted in accordance with the ethical standards set forth in the Helsinki Declaration (1983). No participant or relatives objected to the use of anonymized clinical and biological data for research purposes. The study was approved by the Ethical Committee of Angers University Hospital (2020/67). The study protocol was also declared to the National Commission for Information Technology and civil Liberties (CNIL).

3. RESULTS

Sixty-six participants (mean ± SD age 87.7 ± 9.0years, range 63-103years; 77.3% women) were infected with SARS-CoV-2 and included in this quasi-experimental study. The mean follow-up was 36 ± 17days. Fifty-one people survived COVID-19, while 15 died. The two groups were comparable at baseline with no significant difference regarding the age (P = 0.699), gender (P = 0.731), the mean number of drugs usually taken per day (P = 0.053), the GIR score (P = 0.209) and the serum albumin concentration (P = 0.263) (Table 1). Regarding care dedicated to COVID-19, only the proportion of patients who received a bolus of vitamin D3 during or just before COVID-19 differed between deceased participants and survivors, with a higher prevalence in survivors (respectively 92.2% versus 66.7%, P = 0.023). In contrast, there was no between-group difference in the proportion of patients treated with corticosteroids, hydroxychloroquine or dedicated antibiotics, or hospitalized for COVID-19.

Table 1. Characteristics and comparison of COVID-19 participants (n = 66) according to the study arm.

All COVID-19 participants (n = 66)Study armP-value
Comparator group* (n = 9)Intervention group* (n = 57)
Baseline data
 Age (years), mean ± SD87.7 ± 9.087.4 ± 7.287.7 ± 9.30.660
 Female gender51 (77.3)6 (66.7)45 (78.9)0.414
 Number of drugs usually taken per day, mean ± SD7 ± 25 ± 27 ± 20.043
 GIR score (/6), mean ± SD2 ± 11 ± 0.42 ± 10.003
 Serum albumin concentration (g/L), mean ± SD34.2 ± 5.235.4 ± 2.534.1 ± 5.40.250
COVID-19
 Dedicated treatments
 Use of corticosteroids4 (6.1)1 (11.1)3 (5.3)0.452
 Use of hydroxychloroquine2 (3.0)0 (0.0)2 (3.5)1.000
 Use of dedicated antibiotics34 (51.5)3 (33.3)21 (54.4)0.297
 Hospitalization for COVID-194 (6.1)0 (0.0)4 (7.0)1.000
 Outcomes
 OSCI score for COVID-19 in acute phase0.133
 OSCI 01 (1.5)0 (0.0)1 (1.8)
 OSCI 122 (33.3)1 (11.1)21 (37.5)
 OSCI 219 (28.8)1 (11.1)18 (32.1)
 OSCI 31 (1.5)0 (0.0)1 (1.8)
 OSCI 45 (7.6)1 (11.1)4 (7.1)
 OSCI 53 (4.5)1 (11.1)2 (3.6)
 OSCI 60 (0)0 (0)0 (0)
 OSCI 70 (0)0 (0)0 (0)
 OSCI 815 (22.7)5 (55.6)10 (17.5)
 Mortality15 (22.7)5 (55.6)10 (17.5)0.023
Follow-up after COVID-19 diagnosis (days), mean ± SD36 ± 1720.9 ± 14.338.9 ± 15.60.002

Data presented as n (%) where applicable; COVID-19: Coronavirus Disease 2019; GIR: Iso Resource Groups; OSCI: Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement of the World Health Organization; *: “Intervention group” defined as COVID-19 patients having received a bolus of vitamin D3 supplement during COVID-19 or in the preceding month; †: measured in preceding 6 months; ‡: data were censored at the time of data cutoff (15 May 2020) or until death, as appropriate.

Table 1 indicates the characteristics of participants separated into Intervention (n = 57) and Comparator (n = 9) groups. Their baseline characteristics (age, gender, albuminemia) did not differ between groups, with the exception of the number of drugs usually taken (which involved the use of vitamin D supplements) and the disability score (Table 1). Similarly, the proportion of participants at each OSCI severity level as well as the use of dedicated COVID-19 drugs did not differ between Intervention and Comparator groups. At the end of the follow-up, 82.5% of patients from the Intervention group survived COVID-19, compared to only 44.4% in the Comparator group (P = 0.023).

Fig. 1 shows a statistically significant and clinically relevant protective effect against mortality of bolus vitamin D3 supplementation received during or just before COVID-19. The hazard ratio (HR) for mortality according to vitamin D3 supplementation was 0.21 [95% confidence interval (95%CI): 0.07;0.63] P = 0.005 in the unadjusted model, and HR = 0.11 [95%CI: 0.03;0.48] P = 0.003 after adjustment for all potential confounders. No other covariables were associated with mortality, in particular no other dedicated treatments. Using the season of the COVID-19 diagnosis as an additional potential confounder did not affect the results (data not shown). Consistently, Kaplan-Meier distributions showed in Fig. 2 that the residents who had not recently received vitamin D3 supplements had shorter survival time than those having received vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19 (log-rank P = 0.002).

Fig. 1

Fig. 1. Hazard ratio for mortality in frail elderly COVID-19 patients according to the use of bolus vitamin D3 supplements during or just before COVID-19, adjusted for potential confounders (n = 66).

CI: confidence interval; COVID-19: Coronavirus Disease 2019; GIR: Iso Resource Groups; *: measured in preceding 6 months.

Fig. 2

Fig. 2. Kaplan-Meier estimates of the cumulative probability of participants’ survival according to the use of bolus vitamin D3 supplements during or just before COVID-19 (n = 66).

Finally, the linear regression model illustrated in Table 2 showed that bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19 was inversely associated with the OSCI score for COVID-19 in acute phase. Similar results were found before (β=-2.96 [95%CI: -4.79;-1.12], P = 0.002) and after adjusting the analyses for potential confounders (β=-3.84 [95%CI: -6.07;-1.62], P = 0.001).

Table 2. Univariate and multiple linear regressions showing the association of the use of bolus vitamin D3 supplements during or just before COVID-19 (independent variable) with the OSCI score for COVID-19 in acute phase (dependent variable), adjusted for participants' characteristics (n = 66).

OSCI score for COVID-19 in acute phase
Unadjusted modelFull-adjusted model
Unadjusted β [95% CI]P-valueFull-adjusted β [95% CI]P-value
Bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19-2.96 [-4.79;-1.12]0.002-3.84 [-6.07;-1.62]0.001
Age0.02 [-0.05;0.10]0.5630.04 [-0.05;0.12]0.400
Female gender-0.13 [-1.76;1.49]0.8700.36 [-1.41;2.12]0.687
Number of drugs usually taken per day-0.26 [-0.54;0.02]0.070-0.18 [-0.51;0.15]0.273
GIR score-0.28 [-0.86;0.30]0.3330.21 [-0.48;0.89]0.617
Serum albumin concentration*0.03 [-0.11;0.17]0.647-0.001 [-0.15;0.15]0.993
Use of corticosteroids2.41 [-0.36;5.20]0.0873.53 [0.30;6.75]0.033
Use of hydroxychloroquine1.83 [-2.11;5.76]0.3572.49 [-1.59;6.57]0.226
Use of dedicated antibiotics-0.22 [-1.59;1.14]0.746-0.56 [-2.21;1.10]0.503
Hospitalization for COVID-191.09 [-1.75;3.92]0.4460.72 [-2.48;3.93]0.652

β: coefficient of regression corresponding to a change in OSCI score for COVID-19 in acute phase (/8); CI: confidence interval; COVID-19: Coronavirus Disease 2019; GIR: Iso Resource Groups; OSCI: Ordinal Scale for Clinical Improvement of the World Health Organization; *: measured in preceding 6 months.

4. DISCUSSION

The main finding of this nursing-home-based quasi-experimental study is that, irrespective of all measured potential confounders, bolus vitamin D3 supplementation during or just before COVID-19 was associated with less severe COVID-19 and better survival rate in frail elderly. No other treatment showed protective effect. This novel finding provides a scientific basis for vitamin D replacement trials attempting to improve COVID-19 prognosis.

To our knowledge we provide here the first quasi-experimental data examining the effect of vitamin D supplementation on the survival rate of COVID-19 patients. To date, only rare observational data, all of which are consistent, are available on the link between vitamin D and COVID-19. The first reports in COVID-19 patients indicated that hypovitaminosis D is highly prevalent in this population, reaching 85% [13], and that serum 25(OH)D concentrations are lower in COVID-19 patients compared to controls [14]. Similarly, significant inverse correlations were found in 20 European countries between the mean serum 25(OH)D concentrations and the number of COVID-19 cases/1 M, as well as with mortality/1 M [5]. The severity of hypovitaminosis D appears to relate to the prognosis of COVID-19 since the mortality rate was multiplied by 7.6 among people with hypovitaminosis D <75 nmol/L, and by 10.1 among those with hypovitaminosis D <50 nmol/L (P < 0.001) [15]. Similarly, another observational study in 212 COVID-19 cases showed that, for each standard deviation increase in serum 25(OH)D, the probability of mild rather than severe COVID-19 was multiplied by 7.9 (P < 0.001), while the probability of mild rather than critical COVID-19 was multiplied by 19.6 (P < 0.001) [16]. These results suggest that increasing serum 25(OH)D concentration may improve the prognosis of COVID-19. Interventional studies dedicated to COVID-19 are yet warranted for investigating the role of vitamin D supplementation on COVID-19 outcomes. Interestingly, previous meta-analyses found that high-dose prophylactic vitamin D supplementation was able to reduce the risk of respiratory tract infections [17]. Based on this observation, we and others are conducting an RCT designed to test the effect of high-dose versus standard-dose vitamin D3 on 14-day mortality in COVID-19 older patients (https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT04344041). While waiting for the recruitment of this RCT to be completed, the findings of the present quasi-experimental study strongly suggest a benefit of bolus vitamin D3 supplementation on COVID-19 outcomes and survival.

How vitamin D supplementation may improve COVID-19 outcomes and survival is not fully elucidated. Three mechanisms are possible: regulation of (i) the RAS, (ii) the innate and adaptive cellular immunity, and (iii) the physical barriers [4]. First, vitamin D reduces pulmonary permeability in animal models of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) by modulating the activity of RAS and the expression of the angiotensin-2 converting enzyme (ACE2) [18]. This action is crucial since SARS-CoV-2 reportedly uses ACE2 as a receptor to infect host cells [19] and downregulates ACE2 expression [20]. ACE2 is expressed in many organs, including the endothelium and the pulmonary alveolar epithelial cells, where it has protective effects against inflammation [21]. During COVID-19, downregulation of ACE2 results in an inflammatory chain reaction, the cytokine storm, complicated by ARDS [22]. In contrast, a study in rats with chemically-induced ARDS showed that the administration of vitamin D increased the levels of ACE2 mRNA and proteins [23]. Rats supplemented with vitamin D had milder ARDS symptoms and moderate lung damage compared to controls. Second, many studies have described the antiviral effects of vitamin D, which works either by induction of antimicrobial peptides with direct antiviral activity against enveloped and non-enveloped viruses, or by immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory effects [24]. These are potentially important during COVID-19 to limit the cytokine storm. Vitamin D can prevent ARDS [25] by reducing the production of pro-inflammatory Th1 cytokines, such as TNFα and interferon γ [24]. It also increases the expression of anti-inflammatory cytokines by macrophages [24]. Third, vitamin D stabilizes physical barriers [4]. These barriers are made up of closely linked cells to prevent outside agents (such as viruses) from reaching tissues susceptible to viral infection. Although viruses alter the integrity of the cell junction, vitamin D contributes to the maintenance of functional tight junctions via E-cadherin [4]. All these antiviral effects could potentiate each other and explain our results.

We also found that none of the other dedicated drugs used in this quasi-experimental study was associated with better survival rate in COVID-19 patients. The interest of these drugs in COVID-19 is still debated, whether for corticosteroids [26], hydroxychloroquine [27] or azithromycin [28]. However, it should be noted that these drugs were given here as part of patient care in the most severe clinical situations, which could have biased and masked their effectiveness (if any).

The strengths of the present study include i) the originality of the research question on an emerging infection for which there is no scientifically validated treatment, ii) the detailed description of the participants’ characteristics allowing the use of multivariate models to measure adjusted associations, and iii) the standardized collection of data from a single research center.

Regardless, a number of limitations also existed. First, the study cohort was restricted to a limited number of nursing-home residents who might be unrepresentative of all older adults. Second, although we were able to control for the important characteristics that could modify the association, residual potential confounders might still be present such as the serum concentration of 25(OH)D at baseline - a low level classically ensuring the effectiveness of the supplementation [29]. As this analysis was not initially planned, no concerted efforts were made to systematically measure the serum 25(OH)D concentration before and after supplementation. Third, the quasi-experimental design of our study is less robust than an RCT. Participants in the Comparator group did not receive vitamin D placebo, and there was no randomization. It should yet be noted that the characteristics of the two groups did not differ at baseline, which allows interpreting the survival difference as linked to the vitamin D3 supplementation.

5. CONCLUSIONS

In conclusion, we were able to report among frail elderly residents that bolus vitamin D3 supplementation taken during or just before COVID-19 was associated with less severe COVID-19 and better survival rate. No other treatment showed protective effect.

Vitamin D3 supplementation may represent an effective, accessible and well-tolerated treatment for COVID-19, the incidence of which increases dramatically and for which there are currently no validated treatments. Further prospective, preferentially interventional, studies are needed to confirm whether supplementing older adults with bolus vitamin D3 during or just before the infection could improve, or prevent, COVID-19.

SPONSOR’S ROLE

No sources of funding were used to assist in this study.

AUTHORS CONTRIBUTION

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CA has full access to all of the data in the study, takes responsibility for the data, the analyses and interpretation and has the right to publish any and all data, separate and apart from the attitudes of the sponsors. All authors have read and approved the manuscript.

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Study concept and design: CA, BH, CGE, JMS, LL and TC.

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Acquisition of data: BH and CGE.

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Analysis and interpretation of data: CA and TC.

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Drafting of the manuscript: CA.

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Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: BH, CGE, JMS, LL and TC.

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Obtained funding: Not applicable.

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Statistical expertise: CA.

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Administrative, technical, or material support: CA and TC.

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Study supervision: CA.

Declaration of Competing Interest

The authors report no declarations of interest.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to thank their collaborators:

- Angeline MEY, MD, from the Department of Clinical Gerontology, University Hospital of Saint-Etienne, Saint-Etienne, France;

- Pauline GUILLEMIN, MD, from the Geriatric Hospital of Saint Symphorien sur Coise, Saint Symporien sur Coise, France;

- Jennifer GAUTIER, MS, from the Research Center on Autonomy and Longevity, University Hospital, Angers, France.

There was no compensation for their contribution.

REFERENCES

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