Authors
Samantha Yoo, Azita Montazeri, Derrick Bennett, Yacong Bo, Peizhan Chen, Susan Duthie, Natalie Jensen, Atipatsa Kaminga, Jun-Shi Lai, Xue Li, Amanda J MacFarlane, Homero Martinez, Helene McNulty, Franco Momoli, Peter Mossey, Ron Munger, Rajendra Prasad Parajuli, Monique Potvin Kent, Michele Rubini, Marjanne Senekal, Lindsey Sikora, Alain Stintzi, Evropi Theodoratou, Hui Wang, Ann Yaktine, Julian Little
Published in
Journal of global health. Volume 16. Pages 04257. Jul 03, 2026. Epub Jul 03, 2026.
Abstract
Autoimmune diseases and bone density loss (osteopenia and osteoporosis) are chronic conditions of complex aetiology that affect diverse populations. Folate may be associated with a higher risk of these disorders due to its essential role in one-carbon metabolism required for nucleotide synthesis, homocysteine metabolism, and methylation processes. However, the evidence on this association is inconclusive.
We searched MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, the Cochrane Library, and the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects from inception to February 2024 for systematic reviews and meta-analyses investigating the associations between folate exposure (dietary intake, supplementation, or blood concentrations) and any autoimmune diseases or skeletal outcomes. Pairs of researchers screened the retrieved syntheses, extracted the relevant data, assessed their risk of bias using the ROBIS tool, and evaluated the credibility of the evidence using predefined criteria.
We found 19 reviews reporting 25 unique associations: 15 on autoimmune diseases (multiple sclerosis, inflammatory bowel disease, psoriasis, human immunodeficiency virus, vitiligo, and systemic lupus erythematosus) and 10 on skeletal outcomes (fractures and bone mineral density loss). Most of the syntheses consisted of small-scale case-control studies. The risk of bias in the included syntheses was high. Owing to the small sample sizes, all the unique associations were assessed to be at a weak level of credibility.
The evidence on the relationship between folate status and autoimmune diseases or skeletal outcomes was limited in breadth and depth. Most of the 25 unique associations were reported by a single synthesis comprising small-scale studies. Subgroup analyses or dose-response analyses were severely limited or unavailable. More well-powered, prospective studies investigating the relationships between folate and autoimmune and skeletal conditions are warranted.
PROSPERO: CRD42021265041.
PMID:
42396914
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 03 Jul 2026.
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