Vitamin D And Fibroids: The Deficiency Link And What To Do About It

Vitamin D deficiency is one of the most consistently documented risk factors for uterine fibroids — yet it is rarely discussed in fibroid management conversations. This article explains what the research shows, why the relationship exists, and what to do about it practically.

Medical note: The information in this article is for educational purposes only and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. No lifestyle approach, diet, or supplement has been proven to shrink or eliminate uterine fibroids. If your symptoms are significant, consult a qualified gynecologist.

The Evidence

Multiple epidemiological and clinical studies have found significant associations between vitamin D deficiency and fibroid presence, number, and size. Key findings include:

  • Women with vitamin D deficiency have a significantly higher risk of fibroid diagnosis compared to women with adequate levels
  • Black women — who have dramatically higher fibroid prevalence, earlier onset, and more severe disease — also have significantly higher rates of vitamin D deficiency (melanin reduces cutaneous vitamin D synthesis)
  • Animal studies have demonstrated that vitamin D supplementation reduces fibroid size — one study showing up to 75% reduction in fibroid volume in a rat model
  • Observational studies in humans show inverse correlations between vitamin D levels and fibroid volume

Human clinical trials directly testing vitamin D supplementation for fibroid treatment are still limited, but the convergence of evidence from multiple directions makes this one of the strongest modifiable risk factors currently identified.


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Why Vitamin D May Affect Fibroids

Vitamin D functions as a steroid hormone, not just a vitamin. It has genomic effects — regulating gene expression in fibroid cells. Specifically, vitamin D has been shown to suppress the expression of genes involved in fibroid cell proliferation and to upregulate genes associated with cell differentiation. It also modulates the renin-angiotensin system and inflammatory pathways relevant to fibroid development.

Additionally, vitamin D supports progesterone production, which may help counterbalance the relative estrogen dominance associated with fibroid growth.

Who Is Most Likely To Be Deficient?

Vitamin D deficiency is widespread — estimated to affect over 1 billion people globally. High-risk groups for severe deficiency include: women living at higher latitudes (less UV exposure), darker skin tones (reduced cutaneous synthesis), women who spend little time outdoors, those with obesity (vitamin D is sequestered in fat tissue), and anyone with limited dietary sources (fatty fish, egg yolks, fortified foods).

What To Do

Step 1: Get tested. A 25(OH)D blood test (available through your GP or privately) gives you your baseline level. Optimal levels for general health are generally cited as 75–125 nmol/L (30–50 ng/mL). Many people with “normal” lab results are still in the low-optimal range.

Step 2: Supplement if deficient. The standard supplementation dose for correcting deficiency is 1,000–2,000 IU/day of vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol). Some individuals require higher doses to correct significant deficiency — your doctor can guide this. Vitamin D3 is better absorbed than D2. Taking it with a meal containing fat improves absorption.

Step 3: Retest after 3 months. Vitamin D levels change slowly — retesting at 3 months tells you whether the supplementation dose is adequate.

For a full overview of evidence-based natural interventions for fibroids, see our guide on supplements for fibroids and our article on what the evidence shows for natural management.

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