Association of Serum Vitamin D Status with Multidimensional Health Parameters in Patients with Diabetic Foot Infections: A Cross-Sectional Analysis in a Tertiary Healthcare Facility. | Pepdox
Association of Serum Vitamin D Status with Multidimensional Health Parameters in Patients with Diabetic Foot Infections: A Cross-Sectional Analysis in a Tertiary Healthcare Facility.
The international journal of lower extremity wounds2025PMID: 41117410
Cross-sectional study of 150 diabetic foot infection patients examining serum vitamin D associations with clinical, biochemical, and inflammatory parameters. Vitamin D deficiency correlated with wound severity and inflammatory markers. Analyzed antimicrobial peptide levels and microbial wound environments in relation to vitamin D status.
Abstract
Aims/IntroductionVitamin D deficiency is prevalent among individuals with diabetic foot infections (DFIs) and can influence a range of patient-related parameters. Hence, we aimed to find the association of serum vitamin D levels with various clinical, biochemical, and inflammatory parameters, as well as the microbial environment in the wounds of DFI patients.Materials and MethodsFrom September 2022 to March 2024, 169 DFI patients participated in cross-sectional research at the hospital. Utilising an electrochemiluminescence immunoassay, vitamin D levels were determined. Vitamin D receptor (VDR) and Cathelicidin (LL-37) were estimated using ELISA Kits. The tissue culture plate technique was used to analyze biofilm formation. Patient-related parameters were obtained from medical records.ResultsThe vitamin D status of DFI patients indicated that 70.4% were deficient, 19.5% were insufficient, and 10.1% were sufficient. The median vitamin D, VDR protein, and LL-37 values were 15.3 ng/mL, 0.832 ng/mL, and 1.54 ng/mL, respectively. Biofilm formation was seen in 84.36% of bacteria from vitamin D-deficient DFI patients ( < .001). Vitamin D levels were negatively correlated with ulcer duration, hospital stay, white blood cell count, neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio, C-reactive protein, and systemic inflammation index (r = -0.787, -0.849, -0.6, -0.475, -0.402, and -0.521, respectively; < .001). However, vitamin D levels were positively correlated with VDR and LL-37 levels (r = 0.988 and 0.944, respectively; < .001).ConclusionsThe majority of DFI patients exhibited vitamin D deficiency, which was significantly associated with most of the clinical, biochemical, and inflammatory parameters, in addition to the microbial environment within the wound.