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The main objective of the study is to assess the effect of vitamin D treatment on painful diabetic neuropathy in Pakistan.
This is a prospective study of diabetic patients with a DN score ≥ 4, administered a single dose of 600,000 IU of Vitamin D.
All diabetic patients (type 1 and type 2) at the screening visit were considered eligible to participate in the study. The change in painful diabetic neuropathy scores was assessed using DN4 Neuropathic Pain Diagnostic Questionnaire and SF - MPQ for all participants at each visit.
Full description
Background Painful diabetic neuropathy (DPN) is common in patients with long-standing diabetes mellitus. The prevalence of neuropathy approaches 50% in those with diabetes for 25 years. Among patients with neuropathy, 11.6% with type 1 diabetes and 32.1% with type 2 diabetes have neuropathic pain. In our recent observational study of a large cohort of diabetic patients from primary care in northwest England (n = 15,692), painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN), assessed using the neuropathy symptom score (NSS) and neuropathy disability score (NDS) (NSS >/=5 and NDS >/=3) was 21%, and the prevalence of painful symptoms (NSS >/=5) was 34%. Despite less neuropathy in South Asians (14%) compared to Europeans (22%) (P < 0.0001), painful symptoms were greater in South Asians (38 vs. 32%, P < 0.0001) and they maintained a 50% increased risk of painful neuropathy symptoms (P < 0.0001).
The potential for an association between vitamin D and a beneficial effect on neuropathy is based on experimental data which has shown that vitamin D3 can upregulate NGF and the products of its neuronal target genes resulting in an improvement in experimental diabetic neuropathy. Vitamin D insufficiency has recently been associated with retinopathy and self-reported peripheral neuropathy symptoms even after adjusting for demographic factors, obesity, comorbidities, use of medications for neuropathy and diabetes duration and glycemic control. Of course, there may be some overlap between the symptoms associated with vitamin D deficiency and diabetic neuropathy, which may partly explain the excess painful symptoms we have observed in Asians, particularly as the latter have excess vitamin D deficiency.
The preliminary data suggests there is an urgent need to undertake a blinded placebo-controlled randomised trial of vitamin D3 in the treatment of diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
Aims:
Study Drug: Injectable cholecalciferol (inj. Vitamin D3 600,000 IU).
Data Analysis and Statistical Considerations:
The normality of the data will be assessed and if the data are severely non-normal, log transformations will be considered. The primary analysis will compare the change from baseline without an alpha adjustment for the multiple comparisons. Comparisons within each treatment group across time will also be considered. The analysis will be performed with Last Observation Carried Forward (LOCF).
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143 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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