“…Although vitamin D is recognized by its classic role in bone health, a growing body of evidence has linked its deficiency, a re-emerging global health problem, with increased risk for several diseases 1,2 including prostate cancer. [3][4][5] Prostate cancer is one of the most commonly diagnosed neoplasms and the fifth leading cause of cancer death worldwide. 6 Experimental studies involving primary cultures, 7,8 cell lines, 8,9 xenograft systems, 10 and transgenic models of prostate cancer 11,12 showed that vitamin D in its biologically active form, the 1,25dihydroxyvitamin D, plays a growth-inhibitory effect on the prostate.…”