Vitamin
D deficiency linked to more aggressive lymphoma
(NaturalNews)
Lymphoma patients with vitamin D deficiency
are twice as likely to die from their cancer
than patients with sufficient blood levels
of the vitamin, according to a study
conducted by researchers from the Mayo Clinic
and presented at a meeting of the American
Society of Hematology.
Researchers
took blood samples from 374 patients between
2002 and 2008 who had been recently diagnosed
with a cancer of the white blood cells known
as diffuse large B-cell lymphoma. The average
participant age was 62. Approximately 40 percent
of all lymphomas are of the diffuse large-B
cell type. The disease mainly affects people
over the age of 50.
The researchers
found that roughly 50 percent of all
participants suffered from vitamin D deficiency
at the beginning of the study, defined as
having blood levels below 25 nanograms per
liter. Over an average of three years of follow-up,
patients with vitamin D deficiency were 50
percent more likely to have their cancer worsen
and twice as likely to die as patients with
vitamin levels above 25 nanograms per liter.
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