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Trace Element Replenishment Study in Hemodialysis Patients

M

Marcello Tonelli

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

End Stage Renal Disease

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Low dose: supplemental zinc, selenium and vitamin E
Dietary Supplement: Medium dose: supplemental zinc, selenium and vitamin E
Dietary Supplement: Standard renal vitamin: B and C renal vitamin

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

A pilot randomized trial that compares a new renal nutritional supplement with the standard renal vitamin.

The primary objective is to compare two doses (medium and high) of the new supplement with the renal vitamin currently being prescribed to people with End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD).

Secondary objective is to demonstrate the feasibility of recruitment for a definitive larger trial.

Full description

People with severe kidney disease follow a restricted diet aimed at reducing intake of sodium, potassium and phosphate. These dietary restrictions require reducing their intake of many fresh fruits and vegetables, which may lead to nutritional deficiency. Although the potential for malnutrition in people with kidney disease is well recognized, blood levels of most vitamins and trace elements are rarely measured. Instead, most North Americans with severe kidney disease are routinely prescribed a "renal vitamin" such as Replavite which contains a mixture of B and C vitamins.

Recent evidence (including our work; see http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcmed/subjects/nephrology) indicates that people with severe kidney disease are often deficient in several other biologically essential substances (selenium, zinc) that are readily amenable to supplementation. Pilot data from the Northern Alberta Renal Program (NARP) indicate that approximately 90% of patients have zinc levels below the lower limit of normal; findings for selenium are similar.

Potential benefits of zinc supplementation include improvements in immune function, taste sensitivity (perhaps reducing dietary sodium intake), and improved appetite. Potential benefits of selenium supplementation include reductions in the risk of vascular disease and infection. Supplementation with vitamin E was shown in a randomized trial to reduce serious cardiovascular morbidity in people with kidney failure, but is not routinely used in dialysis patients. This suggests that supplementation of zinc, selenium, and vitamin E has theoretical benefits in kidney failure. Since patients with kidney failure already take many medications, it is logical to combine any new nutritional supplements with the ingredients of the standard renal vitamin to reduce pill burden.

This protocol concerns a novel nutritional supplement consisting of zinc, selenium and vitamin E in addition to the contents of the standard renal supplement of B and C vitamins.

This pilot randomized, double blind trial will compare 2 doses of the new supplement with the standard renal vitamin.

2.0 Objectives: Primary objective: compare two formulations of the new supplement (low and medium doses of zinc and selenium) with standard treatment (Replavite or equivalent renal vitamin).

Secondary objective: demonstrate the feasibility of recruitment for a definitive larger trial

Enrollment

150 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Stable on hemodialysis for 3 to 36 months
  2. Age greater or equal to 18 years
  3. Receiving Replavite or equivalent renal vitamin at baseline
  4. Receiving 3 dialysis treatments per week

Exclusion criteria

  1. Pregnant (sexually active pre-menopausal females must have negative serum pregnancy test at baseline)
  2. Pregnancy, kidney transplantation, a dialysis modality switch, or gastrointestinal surgery planned within 6 months
  3. Known allergy to corn starch
  4. Known allergy to zinc, selenium, vitamin E or renal vitamin.
  5. Projected life expectancy of <6 months
  6. Any other conditions or procedures that, in the opinion of the investigator, would impede absorption of the study product.
  7. Participants already taking a vitamin E, zinc or selenium supplement (alone or included in another multi-vitamin).
  8. Individuals with a history of head or neck cancer in the past 5 years.
  9. Ostomy or short gut syndrome.
  10. Enroll in another (interventional) trial.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

150 participants in 3 patient groups

Low dose
Experimental group
Description:
Standard renal vitamin plus low dose zinc and selenium plus vitamin E 1 capsule p.o, daily
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Low dose: supplemental zinc, selenium and vitamin E
Dietary Supplement: Standard renal vitamin: B and C renal vitamin
Medium dose
Experimental group
Description:
Standard renal vitamin plus medium doses of zinc and selenium plus vitamin E 1 capsule p.o, daily
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Standard renal vitamin: B and C renal vitamin
Dietary Supplement: Medium dose: supplemental zinc, selenium and vitamin E
Standard treatment
Active Comparator group
Description:
Standard renal vitamin 1 capsule p.o, daily
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Standard renal vitamin: B and C renal vitamin

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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