NEW YORK – Vitamin D deficiency was linked with an increased prevalence of psychotic symptoms in adolescents hospitalized for psychiatric reasons in a single-center study of 77 patients.
"The association of vitamin D deficiency with psychotic features warrants further investigation as a risk factor for both physical and mental health outcomes" in adolescents with serious mental illness, Dr. Barbara L. Gracious and her associates said in a poster presented at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
"The importance of vitamin D for brain development and function in both healthy and psychiatric populations is less well appreciated and understood, compared with its known role in bone health and emerging role in metabolic health," said Dr. Gracious, a psychiatrist at Nationwide Children’s Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and her colleagues.
Prior study findings documented links between vitamin D levels and seasonal affective disorder, depression, and schizophrenia, observations that highlighted the potential for vitamin D levels to modulate vulnerability to mental disorders.
To explore a possible link between vitamin D and psychosis, Dr. Gracious and her associates studied 77 adolescents who presented at the University of Rochester (N.Y.) for inpatient or partial hospital mental health treatment during October 2008-June 2009. The patients averaged 15 years old, and underwent a psychiatric assessment at the time of their hospitalization by an emergency-room psychiatrist and by the attending child psychiatrist. Psychosis was defined as hallucinations, paranoia, or delusions. The researchers measured blood levels of 25-hydroxy vitamin D with an immunoassay.
The assays showed that 31 of the referred adolescents (40%) had vitamin D deficiency, defined as a blood level less than 20 ng/mL; 26 (34%) had vitamin D insufficiency, defined as a blood level of 20-30 ng/mL; and 20 (26%) had a normal vitamin D level, defined as greater than 30 ng/mL.
Overall, the researchers identified psychotic symptoms in 19 of the 77 patients (25%). The psychotic prevalence rate among vitamin D–deficient adolescents was 13 out of 31 (42%). Among 26 adolescents with vitamin D insufficiency, 3 (12%) had psychotic symptoms. In 20 adolescents with a normal vitamin D level, 3 patients (15%) showed psychotic symptoms.
In an unadjusted, odds ratio analysis, vitamin D–deficient adolescents had a significant, fourfold increased risk of psychosis, compared with patients with normal vitamin D levels.
On the basis of these findings, physicians should now consider clinical screening of vitamin D levels in severely mentally ill adolescents at high risk for chronic mental and metabolic illness, and supplementing those who are deficient or insufficient, Dr. Gracious and her associates concluded. Further research should explore the levels of vitamin D intake and sun exposure needed by these patients, and also explore the role that vitamin D plays in the severity of mental illness in patients of other ages, they said.
Dr. Gracious did not have any disclosures.