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Vitamin D and COVID-19 Management

U

University of Alberta

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 3

Conditions

COVID-19

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Vitamin D3
Dietary Supplement: Ddrops® products, 50,000 IU, Oral

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04385940
Pro00100606

Details and patient eligibility

About

A novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak is a global dramatic pandemic that is immeasurably impacting the communities. Due to lack of data, symptomatic management is used for COVID-19 infection including oxygen therapy and mechanical ventilation for those with severe infection. Considering immunomodulatory, anti-inflammatory anti-fibrotic and anti-oxidant actions of vitamin D, it's safety and ease of administration, as well as direct effects of vitamin D on immune cell proliferation and activity, pulmonary ACE2 expression and reducing surface tension, evaluation of vitamin D supplementation as an adjuvant therapeutic intervention could be of substantial clinical and economic significance. High prevalence of vitamin D deficiency in elderly, smokers, patients with chronic diseases and excess uptake by adipose tissue in obesity make investigations of its role as a secondary therapeutic agent in COVID-19 conceivable. It should be necessary to monitor serum 25(OH)D levels in all inpatient and outpatient populations with COVID-19 to identify the importance of maintaining or promptly increasing circulating levels of 25(OH)D into the optimal range of 100-150 nmol/L.

The aim of this study is to conduct a double blind, randomized, controlled three weeks clinical trial on the efficacy of vitamin D (daily low dose versus weekly high dose) in COVID-19 patients in order to determine the relationship between baseline vitamin D deficiency and clinical characteristics and to asses patients' response to vitamin D supplementation in week three and determine its association with disease progression and recovery.

Subjects who are randomized to high-dose will be asked to take 50,000 IU for two times during the first week and one dose over second and third weeks to quickly raise their serum levels. Subjects in the low-dose arm will take vitamin D 1000 IU daily for three weeks.

Full description

In-patients

  1. Determine the frequency of low serum Vit D levels (<50 nmol/L) in COVID-19 patients.
  2. Determine the relationship between baseline vitamin D status and disease severity, laboratory biochemical tests of white blood cell count (WBC), C-reactive protein (CRP), lymphocyte count, leukocytes counts and neutrophil-lymphocyte-ratio (NLR), lactate dehydrogenase, IL-6, IL-1beta, TNF-alpha platelet count, albumin, and serum ferritin, required hospitalization and intensive care unit (ICU) admission.
  3. Asses patients' initial response to vitamin D supplementation in week one and determine its association with disease progression and recovery.
  4. Compare disease severity and progression, laboratory biochemical tests of white blood cell count (WBC), C-reactive protein (CRP), lymphocyte count, lactate dehydrogenase, IL-6, IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, platelet count, albumin, and serum ferritin, hospital admission and length of stay, duration of mechanical ventilation, hospital mortality and respiratory failure differ between the early responder and non-responder groups.

Out-patients

  1. Determine the frequency of low serum Vit D levels (<50 nmol/L) in COVID-19 patients.
  2. Determine the relationship between baseline vitamin D deficiency and clinical characteristics.
  3. Asses patients' response to vitamin D supplementation in week three and determine its association with disease progression and recovery

Enrollment

11 patients

Sex

All

Ages

17+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Patients with COVID-19:

  • ≥ 17 years old
  • Both sexes

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with dementia, learning disability, mental health needs and alcohol or drug dependency, pregnant women will be excluded.
  • Patients with sarcoidosis, hypercalcemia, known vitamin D intolerance

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

11 participants in 2 patient groups

High dose vitamin D
Experimental group
Description:
Ddrops® products,Vitamin D3, 50,000 IU, Oral
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Ddrops® products, 50,000 IU, Oral
Low dose vitamin D
Active Comparator group
Description:
Vitamin D3 1000IU
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Vitamin D3

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Aldo Montano-Loza, MD, MSc, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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