Vitamin D intake and PSA reduction
I have read a medical study in which they said a 40000 IU of Vitamin D daily intake for 10 weeks reduced PSA substantially.
Can anyone here elaborate on this please
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I am not sure what to say...
Over my ten years with PCa, I have seen a lot of literature, I did not say research, about various causes of PCa and treatments outside of the normal radiation, surgery, chemotherapy.
Some of that literature talks about causes such as processed meats, dairy, height...
Some of that literature talks abut supplements role in treatment...Vitamin D, Calcium, Magnesium,...
At the end of the day, my takeaway from that literature is our lifestyle - diet, exercise ,managing stress, can play a role in several ways:
Better enabling us to be in condition to go through treatment.
Mitigating the side effects of treatment.
Improving our recovery from treatment once we stop (if we do for other than hospice!)
I see my primary care doctor annually for my physical, he does an extensive set of labs including the standard CBC, Metabolic, Lipid...we stay on top of diagnostic preventive tests such as colonoscopy, heart calcium tests..., I see my cardiologist annually, same for my optometrist...if I sense something is off between those annual visits, set up a consultation to discuss with them.
The labs my primary care doctor orders do include checking for various things such as Vitamin D, Calcium, Magnesium...if those results come in outside of established ranges, he and I are prepared to discuss supplements, they haven't, we don't....
The two times I have been on ADT, first time 18 months, now 12 months, my urologist has recommended I add a Vitamin D supplement to my daily list of medications, I followed his recommendations. In both cases he ordered a baseline bone density scan and then a post ADT one. In each case, he said I was fine to stop the Vitamin D supplement when I completed ADT based on lab results and the bone density scan.
I have browsed through the various links others have posted, I don't see anything I am willing to hang my hat on as "treatment" to lower my PSA.
Kevin
When mine was low my doctor put me on a 50000 dose once a week for 10 weeks. After that my D level was 78, well above the level needed. He said it was safe to be at 100. I take 5000 daily. Good luck.
Thanks for the clarification as to this May 2021 publication where the two referenced earlier trials, summarized above, are mentioned.
This ProsD study is a double-blinded placebo-controlled phase II randomized control trial and appears quite rigorous. It’s also using a huge initial dose of Vit D (500,000 IU), based on a protocol used in a different trial with melanoma patients.
The authors refer to evidence and a mechanism by which high levels of Vit D may prevent genome DNA damage.
I’ll be interested to read of the results.
D3 increases calcium absorption in the intestine, less for the kidneys more for the serum.