Vitamin D status and risk of incident tuberculosis disease: A nested case-control study, systematic review, and individual-participant data meta-analysis

Aibana, O, Huang, C, Aboud, S, Arnedo-Pena, A, Becerra, MC, Bellido-Blasco, JB, Bhosale, R, Calderon, R, Chiang, S, Contreras, C, Davaasambuu, G, Fawzi, WW, Franke, MF, Galea, JT, Garcia-Ferrer, D, Gil-Fortuño, M, Gomila-Sard, B, Gupta, A, Gupte, N, Hussain, R, Iborra-Millet, J, Iqbal, NT, Juan-Cerdán, JV, Kinikar, A, Lecca, L, Mave, V, Meseguer-Ferrer, N, Montepiedra, G, Mugusi, FM, Owolabi, O, Parsonnet, J, Roach-Poblete, F, Romeu-García, MA, Spector, SA, Sudfeld, CR, Tenforde, MW, Togun, TORCID logo, Yataco, R, Zhang, Z and Murray, MB (2019). Vitamin D status and risk of incident tuberculosis disease: A nested case-control study, systematic review, and individual-participant data meta-analysis. [Dataset]. PLOS Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1002907
Copy

Few studies have evaluated the association between preexisting vitamin D deficiency and incident tuberculosis (TB). We assessed the impact of baseline vitamins D levels on TB disease risk.

Keywords

vitamin D supplementation, baseline vitamin D deficiency, vitamin D deficiency, TB disease, randomized control trials

No files available. Please consult associated links.


Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core (with Type as Type) MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads