| 11 Juin 2013
 While highly effective vaccines are available, HBV still remains one  of the most significant infectious diseases worldwide. In fact, the  World Health Organization (WHO) states that HBV is 50 to 100 times more  infectious than human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).  Furthermore WHO  reports that two billion individuals have been infected with HBV, which  is responsible for nearly 600,000 deaths each year.  In the U.S. the  Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that up to  1.4 million Americans are living with chronic HBV.   “Vitamin D helps maintain a healthy immune system and there is  evidence of its role in inflammatory and metabolic liver disease,  including infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV),” explains lead  investigator Dr. Christian Lange from Johann Wolfgang Goethe University  Hospital in Frankfurt.  “However, the relationship between vitamin D  metabolism and chronic HBV infection remains unknown and is the focus of  our present study.”   Between January 2009 and December 2010, the team recruited 203  patients with chronic HBV who had not previously received treatment for  their infection.  Levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D were measured from each  participant. Patients co-infected with HCV, HIV, or hepatitis D; those  with excessive alcohol use; and those with liver cancer or other  malignancies were excluded.   Results show that 34% of participants had severe vitamin D  deficiency (less than 10 ng/mL), 47% with vitamin D insufficiency  (between 10-20 ng/mL) and 19% had normal levels of vitamin D (greater  than 20 ng/mL).  Further analyses indicate that the concentration of HBV  in the blood, known as viral load, was a strong indicator of low  vitamin D levels.  In patients with HBV DNA less than 2000 IU/mL versus  2000 IU/mL or more, the levels of vitamin D were 17 and 11 ng/mL,  respectively.   Researchers also determined that patients with the hepatitis B  antigen (HBeAg) had lower levels of vitamin D than HBeAg negative  participants. Inverse seasonal fluctuations between vitamin D and HBV  levels were noted, which further suggests a relationship between the two  variables.  “Our  data confirm an association between low levels of vitamin D and high  concentrations of HBV in the blood,” concludes Dr. Lange.  “These  findings differ from previous research of patients with chronic  hepatitis C, which found no connection between vitamin D levels and  concentration of HCV in the blood.”  The authors propose further  investigation of vitamin D as a therapeutic intervention for controlling  HBV. 
Researchers from Germany have found that low levels of vitamin D are  associated with high levels of hepatitis B virus (HBV) replication.   Findings published online in  Hepatology,  a journal of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases,  suggest seasonal fluctuations in vitamin D and HBV levels point to a  link in these variables among patients with chronic HBV.