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Vitamin D Receptor Polymorphisms Associated with Susceptibility to Obesity: A Meta-Analysis.
Chen, X, Wang, W, Wang, Y, Han, X, Gao, L
Medical science monitor : international medical journal of experimental and clinical research. 2019;:8297-8305
Abstract
BACKGROUND Obesity has become a global public health problem. Obesity increases the risk of several lethal diseases. This study aimed to assess whether the obesity susceptibility was associated with genetic variation in vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene by conducting a meta-analysis. MATERIAL AND METHODS PubMed, EMBASE and Cochrane Library databases were screened for all relevant articles published up to October 2018. The pooled odds ratios (OR) were calculated using STATA 13.0 software for 4 polymorphisms in the VDR gene (ApaI, BsmI, FokI and TaqI). RESULTS Seven case-control studies, including 1188 obese patients and 1657 healthy controls, were recruited. The pooled findings showed that there were no associations between obesity risk and the VDR polymorphisms in ApaI, BsmI and TaqI loci overall. However, VDR TaqI polymorphism was associated with the risk of obesity in Asian under homozygous [TT versus tt: odds ratio (OR)=0.26, 95% confidence interval (CI)=0.14-0.49; P<0.001], heterozygous (Tt versus tt: OR=0.34, 95% CI=0.18-0.64; P=0.001), and dominant (TT+Tt versus tt: OR=0.30, 95% CI=0.17-0.52; P<0.001) models; FokI variant was related with increased risk of obesity only under dominant model (FF+Ff versus ff: OR=1.54, 95% CI=1.15-2.06; P=0.004). CONCLUSIONS Our meta-analysis results suggest that the T allele of TaqI may have a protective effect, while the F allele of FokI is proposed as a risk factor related to obesity.
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Serum vitamin D level and vitamin D receptor genotypes may be associated with tuberculosis clinical characteristics: A case-control study.
Zhang, Y, Zhu, H, Yang, X, Guo, S, Liang, Q, Lu, Y, Chen, X
Medicine. 2018;(30):e11732
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Abstract
Vitamin D is associated with the susceptibility of tuberculosis and might have an adjunctive effect on anti-tuberculosis treatment. This study aims to investigate the association of vitamin D deficiency and vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene polymorphisms with susceptibility and severity to multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) in comparison with drug-sensitive tuberculosis (DS-TB) and health controls in China.A total of 180 patients with pulmonary TB (128 DS-TB, 52 MDR-TB) and 59 healthy controls were enrolled into 3 groups. Vitamin D levels and VDR genotypes at FokI, BsmI, ApaI, and TaqI sites of all the participants and clinical characteristics of patients with TB were measured and collected.Statistical analysis revealed that vitamin D levels were lower in both TB groups. Patients with TB with bilateral lesions and patients with MDR-TB with extrapulmonary TB had lower vitamin D levels. The frequencies of ff genotype and f allele were higher in both TB groups. Patients with Ff genotype and ff genotype had lower proportion of extrapulmonary TB. Patients with ff genotype had higher proportion of retreatment. Male patients with ff genotype had higher proportion of cavity formation. Patients with DS-TB with AA genotype had higher proportion of cavity formation.Our findings demonstrate that vitamin D deficiency and ff genotype may be the risk factors of TB in Chinese population. In addition, patients with TB with lower level of vitamin D may have a greater risk of bilateral lesions and extrapulmonary TB. VDR genotypes may be associated with TB clinical characteristics.
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Association of Vitamin D receptor Fok I polymorphism with the risk of prostate cancer: a meta-analysis.
Kang, S, Zhao, Y, Liu, J, Wang, L, Zhao, G, Chen, X, Yao, A, Zhang, L, Zhang, X, Li, X
Oncotarget. 2016;(47):77878-77889
Abstract
Several previous studies have been reported to examine the association between Vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene Fok I polymorphism and susceptibility to prostate cancer (PCa), however the results remain inconclusive. To provide a relatively comprehensive account of the association, we searched PubMed, Embase, CNKI, and Wanfang for eligible studies and carry out this meta-analysis. A total of 27 case-control studies with 10,486 cases and 10,400 controls were included. In the overall analysis, Fok I polymorphism was not significantly associated with the susceptibility to PCa. Subgroup analyses showed that significantly association was existed in Caucasian population, the subgroup of population-based controls and the stratified group with advanced tumor.These results indicate that the VDR Fok I polymorphism might be capable of causing PCa susceptibility and could be a promising target to forecast the PCa risk for clinical practice. However further well-designed epidemiologic studies are needed to confirm this conclusion.
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Impact of the polymorphism in vitamin D receptor gene BsmI and the risk of systemic lupus erythematosus: an updated meta-analysis.
Hu, W, Niu, G, Lin, Y, Chen, X, Lin, L
Clinical rheumatology. 2016;(4):927-34
Abstract
The etiology of system lupus erythematosus (SLE) still remains unclear, and vitamin D is associated with immune response. Although a few studies are conducted to investigate the association between polymorphism in vitamin D receptor (VDR) genes and SLE risk, their results are conflicting. Following the guideline of PRISMA, we conducted a systematic search and meta-analysis of the BsmI polymorphism rs1544410 and the risk of SLE. The pooled odds ratios (OR) and its 95 % confidential interval (CI) were calculated by using Stata Version 10 with dominant and recessive model and allele analyses. Nine studies were included in our meta-analysis with a total of 1247 SLE cases and 1687 controls. No significant association was found in both models in the overall population. Only Bb + BB genotypes showed a significantly elevated SLE risk in Asian subgroup with an OR of 3.26 (95 % CI = 1.30-8.17) while no significance was observed in Caucasian population. Notably, B allele significantly increased the SLE risk among Asian population with an OR of 2.29 (95 % CI = 1.14-4.61). No positive findings were reported in Caucasian population and in the overall analysis. In Asian population, Bb + BB genotype and B allele can significantly increase the SLE risk.
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Associations study of vitamin D receptor gene polymorphisms with diabetic microvascular complications: a meta-analysis.
Liu, Z, Liu, L, Chen, X, He, W, Yu, X
Gene. 2014;(1):6-10
Abstract
BACKGROUND Emerging evidence from preclinical and clinical studies has shown that vitamin D plays an important role in the pathogenesis of diabetic microvascular complications (DMI). Several potentially functional polymorphisms (ApaI, BsmI, FokI and TaqI) of vitamin D receptor (VDR) gene have been implicated in DMI risk, but individually published studies showed inconclusive results. The aim of this study was to quantitatively summarize the association between VDR polymorphisms and DMI risk. METHODS We searched all the publications about the associations mentioned as above from PubMed and ISI database updated in December 2013. Meta-analysis of the overall odds ratios (ORs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs) was calculated with the fixed or random effect model. RESULTS Eight studies involving 2734 subjects were included. Allelic and genotypic comparisons between cases and controls were evaluated. Overall analysis suggests that no significant association was observed among the ApaI, BsmI, FokI and TaqI variants and DMI risk in diabetic patients (all P values >0.05). In the stratified analysis, significant association was observed with diabetic nephropathy (DN) for VDR gene FokI polymorphism under a dominant model (OR 1.35, 95% CI 1.05-1.74, P=0.02) in Caucasians. CONCLUSIONS This meta-analysis indicated that the FokI polymorphism in VDR gene might affect individual susceptibility to DN in Caucasians. Further investigations are needed to confirm our results.