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Blood Pressure in Blacks and Calcium (BBC) and Vitamin D Study

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Loyola University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2

Conditions

Hypertension
Vitamin D Deficiency

Treatments

Drug: Cholecalciferol

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Adequate levels of vitamin D are essential for bone health at all ages but low levels of vitamin D may also negatively impact other aspects of health such as blood pressure. The investigators have previously shown that adults with African ancestry living near the equator have much higher levels of vitamin D and higher levels of blood pressure compared to adults with African ancestry living in the Chicago area. Multiple clinical trials have examined vitamin D supplementation for reducing blood pressure levels but very few studies have focused on adults with African ancestry and low vitamin D levels. In addition, most previous clinical trials have not addressed calcium intake. While vitamin D may modulate blood pressure via its actions on activation of the renin angiotensin aldosterone system, it is also possible that vitamin D mediates blood pressure via its effects on gastrointestinal calcium absorption. This pilot study is a one arm study, which will assess the safety and feasibility of supplementing 15 young adults with African ancestry and low vitamin D levels with 5,000 IU of Cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) combined with 1000 mg of elemental calcium daily for 3 months. Participants will be recruited from the Maywood Illinois and surrounding areas with flyers and brochures. The investigators will also contact previous participants of the Modeling the Epidemiologic Study/Vitamin D Ancillary Study by phone and letters. At baseline, all participants will have blood pressure measured and will provide a fasting serum specimen and a 24-hour urine collection. Calcium, parathyroid hormone level vitamin D will be measured in serum specimens and 24-hour urine calcium excretion will be measured. Repeat visits will be completed at 6 and 12 weeks of follow-up to again measure resting blood pressure and serum calcium and vitamin D levels. The overall goal is to collect pilot data to help design a larger trial of vitamin D and calcium supplementation for lowering blood pressure in young adults with African ancestry.

Full description

This pilot study will recruit 15 black U.S. adults ages 25-45 years of age with 25(OH)D levels < 20 ng/ml and no use of anti-hypertensive medications and a resting seated systolic blood pressure ≥ 120 mmHg and will measure baseline levels of total 25(OH)D, 25(OH)D2, 25(OH)D3, free vitamin 25(OH)D, active vitamin D [1,25(OH)D], parathyroid hormone level, serum calcium, and 24-hour calcium excretion.

Participants will then take the supplements vitamin D3 5000 IU and elemental calcium 1000 mg daily for three months. Investigators will measure changes in blood pressure, total 25(OH)D, 25(OH)D2 and 25(OH)D3, 1,25(OH)D and free 25(OH)D, parathyroid hormone levels, serum calcium and 24-hour urine calcium excretion over the three month period.

The overall goal is to collect pilot data to determine the feasibility of a larger trial to determine whether vitamin D combined with calcium lowers blood pressure in young black adults with low 25(OH)D levels.

This will be a single arm non-blinded feasibility study of 15 participants. The study population will consist of 15 adults ages 25-45 years with self-reported African American race/ethnicity. All participants will provide written informed consent.

Intervention:

This study has only one arm and all participants will receive Cholecalciferol (vitamin D3) 5,000 IU daily for 3 months and 1000 mg of calcium citrate daily for 3 months. There will be no placebo and no blinding of the agent. Participants will receive a 3 month supply of drugs which will be administered by the Loyola pharmacy. Serum vitamin D and calcium levels will be measured at study initiation and at 6 and 12 weeks (study end). Participants will stop taking stop both vitamin D and calcium administration with serum calcium levels are greater than or equal to 10.6 meq/L and/or a 25(OH)D levels are greater than or equal to 80 ng/dl at the 6 week visit.

Safety Monitoring:

The investigators will query any hospitalizations or emergency room visits over the past month and reasons for those visits at the baseline, 6 and 12 week follow-up visits. Serum calcium and vitamin D levels will be measured at 6 and 12 weeks and anyone with serum calcium levels ≥ 10.6 meq/L and/or a 25(OH)D level ≥ 80 ng/ml will stop treatment. All adverse events will be reported to the Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences Institutional Review Board. A data safety and monitoring board will review all data collected after completion of the 6 week visit to ensure safety of the study.

Stopping plans:

Any participant who develops a serum calcium levels ≥ 10.6 meq/L and/or a 25(OH)D level ≥ 80 ng/ml will stop treatment but they will continue to be monitored in the study through week 12 when serum calcium and 25(OH)D levels will be measured at the end of the study. The study will continue until participants have been followed for 12 weeks.

Analysis Plan:

This feasibility study will examine multiple aspects of the pilot data including the total number of persons enrolled vs. number of total persons identified as eligible. Pill counts will be done at the 6 and 12 week visit to assess compliance with vitamin D and calcium supplementation. The percentage of participants taking 80% or more of the vitamin D3 supplement and the calcium supplement will be determined. The number of participants reporting symptoms and all adverse events will be quantified. Repeated measures analysis of variance models will be used to assess change in the outcome measures including systolic and diastolic blood pressure, vitamin D measures, parathyroid hormone levels and 24-hour urine calcium excretion values.

Enrollment

5 patients

Sex

All

Ages

25 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 25-45 years
  2. Self-reported race/ethnicity African American
  3. BMI ≥ 18 kg/m2
  4. Total 25(OH)D levels < 20 ng/ml (50 nmol/L)
  5. No use of vitamin D supplements within past 30 days of the screening visit
  6. Able to provide written informed consent
  7. Willing to take a vitamin D supplement daily for 3 months
  8. Willing to return for follow-up visits to measure blood pressure and provide a blood sample to measure vitamin D and serum calcium
  9. No current use of blood pressure lowering medications
  10. Systolic blood pressure ≥ 100 mmHg and diastolic blood pressure ≥ 60 mmHg

Exclusion criteria

  1. Medical history of chronic disease that affect gastrointestinal absorption of vitamin D: Crohn's disease, cystic fibrosis, and celiac disease
  2. Use of medications which may affect total 25(OH)D levels: antiepileptic drugs, steroids, bile acid sequestrants, lipase inhibitors, orlistat
  3. Current use of vitamin D supplements or use in past month and unwillingness to discontinue for at least 1 month prior to study enrollment
  4. History of kidney stones or hypercalciuria
  5. Fasting serum calcium ≥ 10.2 mg/dl
  6. Average systolic blood pressure ≥ 140 mmHg
  7. Average diastolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mmHg
  8. Presence of type 1 diabetes mellitus, active malignancy, active thyroid disease or sarcoidosis
  9. Pregnant or planning a pregnancy
  10. Estimated glomerular filtration rate (based on serum creatinine level) is < 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 based on the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease formula

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

5 participants in 1 patient group

Vitamin D
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will all receive supplementation with cholecalciferol 5000 IU and calcium citrate 1000 mg daily for 3 months
Treatment:
Drug: Cholecalciferol

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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