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Endocrine Abstracts (2022) 81 P551 | DOI: 10.1530/endoabs.81.P551

ECE2022 Poster Presentations Calcium and Bone (68 abstracts)

Relationship between serum Vitamin D and statin-associated muscle symptoms

Oksana Obertynska


National Pirogov Memorial Medical University, Vinnytsya, Department of Propedeutics of Internal Medicine, Vinnytsya, Ukraine


Muscle symptoms are the most common side effects of statin therapy and reasons for its discontinuation. Low serum vitamin D may contribute to statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS). The aim was to investigate the relationship between occurrence of SAMS and level of vitamin D (D), determine predictors of SAMS.

Methods: 84 statin-treated patients were included in the study: 41 with SAMS (intolerant to ≥2 statins) and 43 patients without SAMS. We use SAMS clinical index (SAMS-CI) to determine SAMS. The vitamin D levels, parathyroid hormone (PTH), hematology and high sensitive protein (hsCRP) were performed.

Results: D was significantly lower (22.3±12.20 ng/ml and 37.53±10.21 ng/ml) and PTH was significantly higher (42.1±14.2 and 30.4±10.2 pg/l, P<.001) in patients with SAMS compared with those without SAMS. In 29% of patient with SAMS were observed vitamin D deficient (D<20 ng/ml) and 43% had an insufficient D (21–29 ng/ml), while only 7% of patient without SAMS had vitamin D deficient and 11% an insufficient D. In patients with SAMS levels hsCRP was significantly higher (P<.001) and hemoglobin (Hb) concentrations were 0.5 g/dL lower than in patients without SAMS (P<.05). Regarding D, mean Hb were 1.2 g/dL lower in vitamin D deficient category than in adequate D category (P<.001). In multivariable modelling we have found an excellent correlation between D and SAMS-CI, Hb and hsCRP (P<.001; P<.05; P<.05; respectively). The correlation between vitamin D and hsCRP was highly significant (r =-0.879, P<.001) in patients with SAMS and less significant in patients without SAMS (r=- 0.402, P<.05). It was shown that decreasing vitamin D levels are associated with increasing hsCRP levels (sign of inflammatory state) in non statin-treated patients. Age, D<25 ng/ml, Hb <12.5 g/dL and hsCRP >3 mg/l at baseline had modest discriminative powers for predicting SAMS (0.56, P<.01; 0.45, P<.01; 0.542, P<.001; 0.712, P<.001; respectively).

Conclusion: We found an inverse association between vitamin D level and a statin-induced muscle symptoms in statin-treated patients. The prevalence of vitamin D deficiency 29% and an insufficiency D 43% in patients with SAMS. A low vitamin D concentration is accompanied by microinflammatory state and anemia risk. Age, lower level of vitamin D and Hb, higher level of hsCRP were identified as potential predictors of statin associated muscle symptoms. So, assessment of vitamin D status may be useful for the diagnosis and management of SAMS, especially in older patients with Hb <12.5 g/dl and hsCRP >3 mg/l.

Volume 81

European Congress of Endocrinology 2022

Milan, Italy
21 May 2022 - 24 May 2022

European Society of Endocrinology 

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