Deskripsi
Heterogeneity among studies examining vitamin D and RA disease activity warranted sensitivity analyses. This figure presents results from leave-one-out or subgroup analyses to identify sources of between-study variation.
More Figures from This Paper
Figure 5
Inverse correlations between serum vitamin D levels and RA disease activity scores have been reported across multiple studies. This figure synthesizes the evidence on vitamin D deficiency as a potential modifiable risk factor in RA.
forest_plot
Figure 6
Geographic and seasonal variation in vitamin D status may confound the relationship with RA disease activity. This figure presents stratified analyses accounting for latitude, season, or supplementation status among RA patients.
chart
Figure 7
Forest plots display the relationship between serum vitamin D levels and disease activity in RA patients. Summary Fisher's z tests with 95% confidence intervals show associations between vitamin D and DAS28 scores across multiple studies.
forest_plot
Figure 8
Subgroup analysis forest plots examine the vitamin D-disease activity relationship in RA patients stratified by study characteristics. Fisher's z scores with 95% confidence intervals indicate consistent inverse associations across subgroups.
forest_plotFigure 4
Forest PlotSource Paper
Serum Vitamin D Level and Rheumatoid Arthritis Disease Activity: Review and Meta-Analysis.Cite This Figure
 > Source: Jin Lin et al. "Serum Vitamin D Level and Rheumatoid Arthritis Disease Activity: Review and Meta." *PloS one*, 2016. PMID: [26751969](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26751969/)
<figure> <img src="https://pdfs.citedhealth.com/figures/26751969/169.png" alt="Heterogeneity among studies examining vitamin D and RA disease activity warranted sensitivity analyses. This figure presents results from leave-one-out or subgroup analyses to identify sources of between-study variation." /> <figcaption>Figure 4. Heterogeneity among studies examining vitamin D and RA disease activity warranted sensitivity analyses. This figure presents results from leave-one-out or subgroup analyses to identify sources of between-study variation.<br> Source: Jin Lin et al. "Serum Vitamin D Level and Rheumatoid Arthritis Disease Activity: Review and Meta." <em>PloS one</em>, 2016. PMID: <a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26751969/">26751969</a></figcaption> </figure>