How low vitamin D causes a high PSA
I tell everyone to sign up with ancan.org for their advanced prostate cancer meetings. You don’t even need to go to a meeting, but you get a weekly newsletter that has a tremendous amount of information.. I’ve already posted about the Prostox meeting that was in this week’s newsletter and here is some information about vitamin D and its effect on PSA.
When alert COO Bill Franklin was told by a Veteran he was advising that the man's PSA had jumped into the 8’s and by the way his Vitamin D level was profoundly low, Bill wondered if they were related. He called me (Dr. John Antonucci) and I looked into it.
It’s true: low levels of vitamin D are associated with elevated PSA levels. Now why would a gland buried deep where there is no sun, and only interested in reproduction, be in a relationship with Vitamin D?
That relationship is complex. Research shows:
Vitamin D insufficiency is associated with a higher risk of adverse effects from paclitaxel, a chemotherapy related to docitaxel. Might vitamin D supplementation help with adverse effects? (Ciao-Sin Chen)
In African American men, vitamin D deficiency is associated with increased odds of prostate cancer diagnosis on biopsy. In both European American and AA men, severe vitamin D deficiency was positively associated with higher Gleason grade and tumor stage. (Murphy)
In another study men were given 3000IU vitamin D or placebo and their testosterone levels were followed. Compared to baseline values, a significant increase in total testosterone levels were observed in the vitamin D supplemented group, and no significant change in testosterone in the placebo group, suggesting vitamin D supplementation might increase testosterone levels.
The incidence of prostate cancer and mortality is higher with low vitamin D throughout adulthood (Mucci). But do we have evidence that correcting low vitamin D is actually associated with a reduction in the risk of prostate cancer? No. (Ryan and Mucci)
In a Randomized Control Trial (RCT) of Vitamin D3 supplementation (4,000 IU/d) vs. placebo in men with prostate cancer under active surveillance there was no significant difference in PSA change after 1 year. High-dose vitamin D supplementation did not lower PSA levels or slow progression. (Marshall)
Similarly, the ProsD trial aimed to determine if oral vitamin D supplementation could prevent prostate cancer (PrCa) progression in men on active surveillance (AS), and found that it did not.(Visalini Nair-Shalliker)
In VITAL trial data, which randomized over 25,000 participants to Vitamin D3 (2,000 IU/d) or placebo, Vitamin D supplementation did not significantly improve overall survival or reduce PSA progression compared to placebo.(Chandler)
Recall that a high PSA in the setting of low vitamin D is not specific for cancer. It only signals that the prostate is more active or "leaky" for some reason, but does not prove cancer is present. While low vitamin D and high PSA are associated, the elevated PSA is not proven to be from prostate cancer—it could be from a variety of benign or inflammatory prostate conditions.
Is all this important? After all, what is the prevalence of Vitamin D deficiency? It depends on the definition. Studies in North America and Europe generally define Vitamin D deficiency as a serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D level below 20 ng/mL. Estimates of deficiency in men with prostate cancer typically range from 30% to 80%. (Murphy et al)
In Murphy's study, among 120 men with newly diagnosed, untreated prostate cancer in Chicago, 40% were vitamin D deficient and 32% were insufficient. (Cutoffs at 20 and 30 mg/ml)
Trump et al. (Ed: do we trust Trump numbers?) reported in a review that ~40–50% of men with prostate cancer are vitamin D deficient, and rates of insufficiency are even higher.
Bermingham reported in a meta-analysis of 21 studies, 54% of men with prostate cancer were vitamin D deficient.
These are amazingly high numbers.
What might be going on here? Here are some ideas:
- Vitamin D plays a key role in regulating cell proliferation (decrease), differentiation (increase), and apoptosis (increase) in prostate--and presumably prostate cancer--tissue.
- Adequate vitamin D levels may suppress abnormal cell growth and reduce inflammation, potentially limiting prostate tissue hyperactivity or benign hypertrophy, which can elevate PSA levels.
- Vitamin D has immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory properties.
- Chronic inflammation in the prostate is associated with increased PSA levels, maybe by leading to PSA leakage into the bloodstream.
- Vitamin D interacts with androgen signaling pathways, which are central to prostate cancer biology. D-deficiency may alter androgen receptor activity, potentially leading to increased prostate cell activity or turnover, reflected as higher PSA.
- Vitamin D influences the prostate’s microenvironment by modulating growth factors, cytokines, and extracellular matrix components.
- Deficiency may therefore promote a pro-inflammatory, pro-proliferative environment, increasing PSA levels.
- Low vitamin D often correlates with reduced sun exposure, poor nutrition, or other health issues which may independently influence PSA levels or prostate health, confounding the association.
-Vitamin D levels are also inversely correlated with prostate volume.
-At high levels Vitamin D may even be bad for the prostate.
Whatever the mechanism is, let’s make sure our elevated PSA levels are not related to Vitamin D. There are of course many things that influence PSA levels. Try to get a Vitamin D level during the diagnostic process. Don't let the lab make you sign a self-pay paper, write me if insurance or Medicare won't pay. Vitamin D is found in fatty fish, egg yolks, and D-fortified cereals, OJ, real and plant milks, and sun.
By the way, despite some of the findings above, when Bill’s guy was put on vitamin D replacement, his PSA went down to the 3’s.
John (dr.john@ancan.org)
Editors Note: You will have picked this up from reading carefully, but be sure to test Vitamin D - Hydroxy 25
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Connect

Thank you Jeff,
Just signed up for ancan.org
Ray
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1 ReactionIncidentally those who live in the Boston latitude are unlikely to obtain enough sun derived stimulus of naturally induced vitamin D from October to April. The incidence of Multiple Sclerosis in the UK increases as one resides further and further to the north suggestive of the sun effect on natural vitamin D. Along with the Epstein Barr virus it is a factor the disease process.
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1 ReactionVery interesting and thanks for posting Jeff. From what I've read there are many men with and without PC as well as women are deficient in Vitamin D. It's very common.
Doctors are just now realizing how important D is and adding to blood tests. If your doctor doesn't check it ask for it!
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1 ReactionI eat salmon 3 days a week so I'm hoping my D is in good shape!
Thanks again Jeff!!!
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1 ReactionIs this vitamin d deficiency in relation increased psa levels purely coincidental and is just a matter of genetics. Again sugar is related to diabetes; but not all people who love their sweets is diabetic. I think sometimes as you age your body changes. Just my opinion not trying to contradic anyone.
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1 Reaction@copyman
Yes indeed...I was a Director of Clinical and Anatomical Laboratory in my career. It was a HUGE deal when physicians started ordering Vitamin D on their patients about 12-15 years ago. A few medical journal articles started showing up with reports on just what Vitamin D was all about...the rest is history. The number of that test being ordered went through the roof after 2010 or so.
When I transitioned to the industry side of the laboratory testing and worked for two different companies over 15 years, the Vitamin D assay was the #1 priority for all lab instrument vendors to develop and market...it is and remains a huge money maker for those companies., so much so, that insurance companies and Medicare started re-thinking their willingness to reimburse for the test...it was costing them millions of dollars per year.
Milk companies were aware of Vitamin D deficiency across the board many years ago, thus "Fortified with Vitamin D" or "Vitamin D Fortified" started showing up on every carton of milk to help develop string health bones in kids (to avoid Rickets). Problem with that is, while it helped kids, teenagers, young adults, the now fully-grown adults transitioned away from milk and start drinking sodas, coffee, energy drinks, and Gatorade type drinks. The only way they could hope to have normal Vitamin D levels, was/is to be out in the sunlight every day for 30 minutes or more, so the underlying tissue layers of their skin could start producing the Vitamin D needed. It's funny how far medicine and nutritional science has come in just 40 years. When I considered a career in biochemistry, focusing on nutritional chemistry, I went to a technical book store and bought a book on vitamins. This was about 1977. The chapter on Vitamin D basically had no information. It was described as the "quiet"/"silent" vitamin whose functions were not well known as yet. We now know that Vitamin D is necessary for a strong immune system, and keeps muscles and brain cells healthy and functioning at optimal levels. That is why the push to consume more fish started in the 1980's and beyond. Fish like Salmon and sardines are high in Vitamin D.
We have come a long way since then in all of Laboratory science and testing. In fact, the first actual laboratory instruments capable of running multiple assays and several different assays were only first-developed in the mid/late 1970's. That is what got me to shift my career focus from what had become cancer research (after biochemistry/nutritional science) to clinical lab. The clinical lab industry exploded in growth in the 1980's, 1990's, and beyond. I satisfied my interest in biochemistry and many other areas of medicine, including cancer, by becoming a Clinical Lab Scientist.
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4 Reactions@asolidrock
Low vitamin D can cause a higher PSA. They did not correlate it to a genetic relationship, It’s just something that people need to be aware of. Testing for vitamin D before jumping into prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment could be beneficial for some people.
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2 ReactionsI think my oncologist focused on vitamin D early in my chemo tx it was always in the high range. My last pre psa levels lab work didn't include vitamin D test; of course my last psa levels have been the same. All of this is interesting for sure and so many variables
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2 ReactionsNow that I think of it my Vitamin D has always been low. I just looked at a 2014 blood test and it was at 15 then, my PSA was 5. Recent blood test it was still low in the 20's. And I do take D3 supplements 2000 to 5000 IU's (not every day) and it still hasn't gone up over the years. My PSA has stayed in the 35-40 range the last 8 months so it seems there is some correlation with D levels & high PSA. I'm curious to see if my D will finally go up once I start treatment or maybe after completed.
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1 Reaction@copyman Before my cancer diagnosis I was concerned that my Vitamin D level of 22 was too low; I had read much about how important it was for general health and the prostate in particular. My GP was not very supportive and told me I was fine.
So of course I started taking 5000D daily with K2 or K3? and something else for absorption; I also bought a tanning machine (only UVB rays for protection against skin cancer) and used it 3X/week for 20 mins as recommended.
Did this for six months and had my blood re-tested…22 AGAIN!!
My GP laughed at me and said in all his years of practice MOST people cannot raise their blood levels of D no matter what they do.
My wife did - significantly and with NO sunlamp; just the same D formula I’d been using…go figure.
I often wonder if D is just overhyped like most other supplements and the only increase to be found is in the bank accounts of the companies who sell it.
Phil
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