People holding breast cancer pin, for article on vitamin D breast cancer

Brazilian researchers find vitamin D boosts breast cancer chemo by 79%

A study out of Brazil suggests that a simple, low-cost supplement could meaningfully improve how well chemotherapy works against breast cancer. Researchers at the Botucatu School of Medicine at São Paulo State University (FMB-UNESP) found that women who took daily vitamin D alongside chemotherapy were 79% more likely to achieve complete tumor disappearance than women who took a placebo.

At a glance

  • Vitamin D supplementation: Women took 2,000 IU of vitamin D daily during chemotherapy — a modest, cost-effective dose rather than a high corrective one.
  • Complete response rate: 43% of women in the vitamin D group saw their cancer fully disappear, compared to 24% in the placebo group.
  • Study population: 80 women aged 45 and older, all receiving chemotherapy before surgery to shrink their tumors, most of whom were vitamin D-deficient at the start.

Why this finding matters

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer in women worldwide. Chemotherapy before surgery — called neoadjuvant chemotherapy — is a standard approach for many patients, and how completely the tumor responds to that treatment is a strong predictor of long-term outcomes.

A therapy that costs a few dollars a month and could raise the complete response rate by that margin is worth taking seriously. The researchers note that vitamin D is widely available, easy to take, and carries a well-established safety profile at this dose.

Most women in the study were deficient in vitamin D before treatment began — a common finding in cancer patients and in the general population. Correcting that deficiency during chemotherapy may have given the immune system more to work with.

How vitamin D may support cancer treatment

Vitamin D is best known for its role in bone health, but its influence on the immune system runs deeper. It helps regulate immune cell activity and has been shown in lab studies to affect how cancer cells grow and die. The UNESP researchers believe restoring adequate vitamin D levels may help the body respond more aggressively to the cancer during treatment.

What makes the UNESP approach notable is the dose. Rather than using the high supplementation levels sometimes used to rapidly correct deficiency, the team used 2,000 IU daily — a level considered safe for long-term use and practical for integration into a standard treatment plan.

Limitations and next steps

The researchers are careful not to overstate the results. The trial included only 80 participants, and the findings have not yet been replicated at scale. Larger, randomized clinical trials are needed before vitamin D can be formally recommended as a routine add-on for breast cancer chemotherapy.

Still, the direction of the finding is clear and the cost of further investigation is low. The research was published in a peer-reviewed oncology context and adds to a growing body of evidence linking nutritional status and cancer treatment outcomes.

Vitamin D deficiency is also not evenly distributed. Populations with darker skin tones, limited sun exposure, and lower incomes face higher deficiency rates — meaning an affordable supplement-based intervention could matter most for communities that already face worse cancer outcomes. That equity angle is one more reason researchers say follow-up work is urgent.

For now, the UNESP team recommends that oncologists consider testing patients’ vitamin D levels at the start of treatment. Supplementation at a modest dose carries little risk and, if this study holds up, may meaningfully shift the odds in a patient’s favor.

Read more

For more on this story, see: OnlyMyHealth

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
  • 🌍 It aims to be inspirational but clear-eyed, accurate, and evidence-based, and grounded in care for the Earth, peace and belonging for all, and human evolution.
  • 💬 Leave your notes and suggestions in the comments below — I will do my best to review and implement where appropriate.
  • ✉️ One verified piece of good news, one insight from Antihero Project, every weekday morning. Subscribe free.

More Good News

  • Salmon in river, for article on coho salmon recovery

    Coho salmon returns surge 10x on California’s Mendocino Coast over last decade

    Coho salmon are back on California’s Mendocino Coast in numbers no one alive expected to see: more than 30,000 endangered adults returned to spawn this past season, roughly ten times the count from a decade ago. Biologists who once walked miles of empty stream are now finding fish tucked under their boots and spawning in channels barely a foot and a half wide. The turnaround follows decades of patient work — over 100 restoration projects, removed culverts, and rebuilt floodplains — meeting a rare stretch of favorable ocean conditions. It’s a reminder that endangered species can come back when communities…


  • Gaborone, Botswana, for article on Botswana sodomy law, for article on Botswana penal code reform

    Botswana officially strikes anti-sodomy law from its national penal code

    Botswana has officially erased its colonial-era anti-sodomy law from the national penal code in 2026, transforming a 2019 court victory into permanent written statute. The original provision, imported under British rule in the 19th century, had once threatened same-sex couples with up to seven years in prison. Striking the language itself matters because unconstitutional laws left on paper can still be used to harass and stigmatize, even when unenforceable. Botswana now joins a small group of African nations that have gone beyond court rulings to fully cleanse discriminatory language from their books. With more than 60 countries still criminalizing same-sex…


  • Sea turtle, for article on ocean protection milestone

    More than 10% of the world’s oceans now officially protected

    Ocean protection just crossed a historic line: as of April 2026, 10.01% of the world’s seas are officially designated as protected, up from 8.6% just two years ago. That leap represents roughly 5 million square kilometers of newly safeguarded waters — an expanse larger than the entire European Union. The milestone fulfills a promise the world first made back in 2010, and it arrived thanks to thousands of small wins: national designations, community-led projects, and Indigenous stewardship of some of the most intact marine ecosystems on Earth. With the UN High Seas Treaty now in force, nations finally have a…



Coach, writer, and recovering hustle hero. I help purpose-driven humans do good in the world in dark times - without the burnout.