PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Margarita Cariolou AU - Meghan A. Cupp AU - Evangelos Evangelou AU - Ioanna Tzoulaki AU - Antonio J. Berlanga-Taylor TI - Importance of vitamin D in critically ill children with subgroup analyses of sepsis and respiratory tract infections: a systematic review and meta-analysis AID - 10.1101/390476 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 390476 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/08/15/390476.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/08/15/390476.full AB - Background Critical care and sepsis remain high priority concerns in children. Observational studies report high prevalence of vitamin D deficiency and present mixed results regarding the correlation between vitamin D status and adverse outcomes. Associations between deficiency and mortality, particularly in children with sepsis, remain unclear. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to address this uncertainty.Methods PubMed, OVID and Google Scholar were searched for observational studies in critically ill children. We obtained pooled prevalence estimates for vitamin D deficiency and odds ratios for the association of mortality in critically ill children treated in intensive care units, with subgroup analysis for children with sepsis. Meta-regression and sensitivity analyses were used to investigate heterogeneity.Findings Forty-eight studies were included. The total sample size was 7,199, with 1,679 (23%) children acting as controls in case-control studies. Of 5,520 critically ill children, 2,664 (48%) were vitamin D deficient (< 50 nmol/L). Results of the random effects model demonstrated a pooled prevalence of vitamin D deficiency of 54.9% (95% CI 48.0-61.6, I2=95.0%, 95% CI 94.0-95.8, p < 0.0001). In subgroup analysis of children with sepsis (16 studies, 788 total individuals) we observed higher prevalence of deficiency (63.8%, 95% CI 49.9-75.7, I2=90.5%, 95% CI 86.2-93.5%, p < 0.0001). In patients admitted to intensive care for respiratory tract infections (24 studies, 1,683 total individuals), prevalence was 49.9% (95% CI 37.6-62.2; I2 = 93.9%, 95% CI 92.1-95.3, p < 0.0001). Only one identified study assessed vitamin D levels in sepsis and mortality. The meta-regression model with all available variables (year of publication, total study sample size, quality score, study design, country group and clinical setting) explained 37.52% of I2 (F = 5.1119, p = 0.0005) with clinical setting and country groups being significant predictors for prevalence.Our meta-analysis (18 studies, 2,463 total individuals) showed an increased risk of death in vitamin D deficient critically ill children both with the random (OR 1.81, 95% CI 1.24-2.64, p-value = 0.002) and fixed effects (OR 1.72, 95% CI 1.27-2.33, p= 0.0005) models with low heterogeneity (I2 = 25.7%, 95% CI 0.0-58.0, p = 0.153) and low evidence of publication bias (p = 0.084, Egger’s test).Interpretation Circulating vitamin D deficiency is common amongst critically ill children, particularly in those with sepsis. Our results suggest that vitamin D deficiency in critically ill children is associated with increased mortality. Clinical trials, studies with larger sample sizes and standardized approaches are needed to further assess associations between circulating levels of vitamin D and mortality or other outcomes in the pediatric population.Funding NoneRegistration PROSPERO (CRD42016050638)Copyright Open access article under terms of CC BY