Vitamin D (for deficiency)

Treatment for Hashimotos Thyroiditis

Typical Dosage: 1000-5000 IU daily

Effectiveness
65%
Safety Score
90%
Clinical Trials
2
Participants
50K

Comparative Safety Scale(Higher is safer)

Cyanide☠️
Meth💀
Cigarettes🚬
Chemo☢️
Alcohol🍺
Morphine💊
Antibiotics💉
Tylenol💊
Exercise🏃
Water💧
90
DangerousModerateSafe
Treatment Details
Dosage Range
1000-5000 IU daily
Time to Effect
1-3 months
Treatment Duration
ongoing, as needed
Evidence Quality
MODERATE
Confidence Score
75%confidence in effectiveness data
Health Economics
Annual Cost of Care
Drug Cost:$20
Monitoring:$75
Side Effect Mgmt:$10
Total Annual:$105
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis
Cost-Effectiveness Rating
EXCELLENT
QALYs Gained
0.3
Outcome-Based Costs
Cost per Responder
$117
Comparison vs No vitamin D supplementation (in deficient individuals)
Cost Difference
$-500/year
Less expensive
QALY Difference
+0.20 QALYs
Better outcomes
Dominance
DOMINATESBetter + cheaper
Vitamin D (for deficiency) Outcomes

for Hashimotos Thyroiditis

Efficacy Outcomes
Overall Effectiveness
+65%
Response Rate
+90%
Common Side Effects
Hypercalcemia (rare, with excessive dosing)
+0.1%
Kidney stones (rare, with excessive dosing)
+0.05%

WARNING: LIMITED TRIALS AVAILABLE

You can search for trials, but you probably can't join any because the 1% Treaty hasn't passed yet. Most trials are severely limited by lack of funding and bureaucratic barriers. Help change this!

Active Clinical Trials
No active trials currently recruiting for this treatment

No active trials found in ClinicalTrials.gov