High dose of vitamin D is safe for people with MS and may help regulate the body's hyperactive immune response, researchers said.
"These results are exciting, as vitamin D has the potential to be an inexpensive, safe and convenient treatment for people with MS," said Peter Calabresi, director of the Johns Hopkins Multiple Sclerosis Center in US.
"More research is needed to confirm these findings with larger groups of people and to help us understand the mechanisms for these effects, but the results are promising," said Calabresi, also a professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
For the study, 40 people with relapsing-remitting MS received either 10,400 international units or 800 international units of vitamin D supplements per day for six months. Patients with severe vitamin D deficiency were not included in the study.
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The current recommended daily allowance of vitamin D is 600 international units. Blood tests at the start of the study and again at three and six months measured the amount of vitamin D in the blood and the response in the immune system's T cells, which play a key role in MS.
Participants taking the high dose of vitamin D reached levels within the proposed target, whereas the group taking the low dose did not reach the target.
Side effects from the vitamin supplements were minor and were not different between the people taking the high dose and the people taking the low dose. One person in each group relapsed, researchers said.
The people taking the high dose had a reduction in the percentage of inflammatory T cells related to MS severity, specifically IL-17+CD4+ and CD161+CD4+ cells.
The people taking the low dose did not have any noticeable changes in the percentages of their T cell subsets.
"We hope that these changes in inflammatory T cell responses translate to a reduced severity of disease," said Calabresi.
The study was published in the journal Neurology.