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This is a 12 week pilot and feasibility study with an enrollment goal of 30 subjects. Half of the subjects will be randomized to vitamin D3 and the other half will receive a placebo. Subjects will be referred from the nutrition or renal clinic at Emory. CKD stage 3 and 4 patients will be eligible for participation if they have been determined to have vitamin D deficiency and are not on treatment with vitamin D or vitamin D analogues. Subjects will sign an informed consent form after reviewing the protocol in detail with the principal investigator. A questionnaire would collect information about dietary vitamin D intake, sunlight exposure, and any symptoms of vitamin D deficiency. The subject will have baseline levels of serum vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D), parathyroid hormone (PTH), serum calcium and phosphate, creatinine and other markers of bone turnover. The questionnaires and the blood draws would be repeated on the 6th and 12th week of the study. Subjects will be given 12 pills of each containing either 50,000 IU vitamin D or placebo and asked to take one pill a week. They would be scheduled to return to the clinic after 6 weeks and blood measurements would be repeated. Subjects will be asked to revisit for their final visit at the 12th week when they would have their last blood draw and assessment.
Full description
Vitamin D supplementation in reducing secondary hyperparathyroidism in chronic kidney disease patients, stage 3 and 4: A randomized, placebo controlled pilot study Problem of interest Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) patients suffer from severe metabolic bone disease, which represents a formidable challenge to physicians. Defective vitamin D metabolism, and secondary parathyroid activation have been suggested as possible causes. Vitamin D is important for musculoskeletal health. Vitamin D can be obtained from the diet or made in the skin from exposure to sunlight, but it has to be converted by the kidneys into calcitriol, the active form in order to be effective. Decreased kidney mass in CKD patients causes reduced capability to convert vitamin D into calcitriol due to less 1-alpha hydroxylase enzyme levels. Current standard of care for patients with chronic renal disease is treatment with vitamin D analogues such as Rocaltrol or Hectoral. However, these medications have the potential to cause hypercalcemia. Studies have shown that calcitriol production becoming dependent on 25- hydroxyvitamin D availability in moderate CKD patients. There is speculation that there is still some "reserve" left for the generation of calcitriol from vitamin D in these patients.
The main question being posed in this study is:
Primary: Can a weekly high dose supplementation of cholecalciferol be effective in raising 25(OH)D levels in patients with CKD and can this reduce parathyroid hormone levels in pre-dialysis chronic kidney disease patients?
Study Design This is an 12 week pilot and feasibility study with an enrollment goal of 30 subjects. Half of the subjects will be randomized to vitamin D3 and the other half will receive a placebo. Subjects will be referred from the nutrition or renal clinic at Emory. CKD stage 3 and 4 patients will be eligible for participation if they have been determined to have vitamin D deficiency and are not on treatment with vitamin D or vitamin D analogues. Subjects will sign an informed consent form after reviewing the protocol in detail with the principal investigator. A questionnaire would collect information about dietary vitamin D intake, sunlight exposure, and any symptoms of vitamin D deficiency. The subject will have baseline levels of serum vitamin D (25-hydroxyvitamin D), parathyroid hormone (PTH), serum calcium and phosphate, creatinine and other markers of bone turnover. The questionnaires and the blood draws would be repeated on the 6th and 12th week of the study. Subjects will be given 12 pills of each containing either 50,000 IU vitamin D3 or placebo and asked to take one pill a week. They would be scheduled to return to the clinic after 6 weeks and blood measurements would be repeated. Subjects will be asked to revisit for their final visit at the 12th week when they would have their last blood draw and assessment.
Treatment This is a randomized control trial. Only half of the subjects will receive vitamin D treatment and the other half placebo. If at the end of the study, the subject is still vitamin D deficiency, they will be referred to an endocrinologist or to their primary doctor for treatment.
Scientific advancement If successful, this study would provide the necessary preliminary data in order to conduct a larger randomized controlled study supplementing vitamin D in chronic kidney disease patients. One potential area of study would be to see whether subjects supplemented with vitamin D were able to raise their active vitamin D levels using the "reserve" hydroxylase enzyme in the kidneys compared to those subjects who were just supplemented with a placebo. This study is necessary in order to determine whether weekly intake of a high dose vitamin D is sufficient to decrease the parathyroid hormone levels in the given time frame.
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34 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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