“…It has been demonstrated that calcium, inorganic phosphate and alkaline phosphatase levels alone do not identify 25(OH)D depletion except when 25(OH)D is deficient (\25 nmol/L) [27], although our study does not entirely concur with this. We found a significant correlation between 25(OH)D and alkaline phosphatase, in that 15% of subjects in our study had elevated alkaline phosphatase concentrations and, of these, 57% had insufficient 25(OH)D. In general, patients with alkaline phosphatase concentrations greater than 120 IU/L, in the absence of liver or other bony diseases, are likely to have low 25(OH)D concentrations.…”