Overall research aims: This study will examine the effect of vitamin D supplementation on the function of the endothelium and microcirculation of patients with chronic kidney disease and vitamin D deficiency. Hypothesis: Vitamin D therapy in patients with CKD and concomitant vitamin D deficiency will improve endothelial, and therefore microcirculatory function, reduce levels of oxidative stress and thus reduce the risk of future CVS events in this population.
Research rationale: Cardiovascular (CVS) diseases are the major cause of death in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), accounting for approximately half of all deaths. Patients with CKD are far more likely to die of CVS disease than progress to end stage renal disease. Recently, vitamin D deficiency has been identified as a non-traditional CVS risk factor. However, vitamin D is not routinely prescribed in the early stages of CKD. Previous publications have established that endothelial, and therefore, microcirculatory dysfunction is a marker of CVS health and a predictor of future CVS events. Studies have also shown that clinical assessments of the microcirculation reflect the overall health and function of the endothelium. Vitamin D has been shown to improve endothelial function in diabetic patients with vitamin D deficiency and normal kidney function. However, no study has examined endothelial dysfunction in patients with CKD and vitamin D deficiency. With the prevalence of CKD and concomitant vitamin D deficiency increasing worldwide, there is a pressing need to examine the effects of vitamin D therapy in the early stages of CKD. This study involves the use of four, non-invasive, detailed assessments of the microcirculation which could be used in a clinical setting to enhance CVS risk profiling. The current study design includes novel clinical and in vitro work examining endothelial function, oxidative stress levels and potential cellular mechanisms by which vitamin D improves endothelial function. Early detection of endothelial dysfunction, before end stage renal disease is reached, will provide a powerful tool for predicting future CVS events and thus provide an opportunity to intervene with therapies, including vitamin D, at an early stage of renal dysfunction. Study objectives: Primary study objective - to evaluate the effects of vitamin D therapy on endothelial function in patients with CKD and vitamin D deficiency. Secondary study objective: to evaluate the effects of vitamin D therapy on key clinical parameters in patients with CKD and vitamin D deficiency. Research plan: We will conduct a double blind, randomised control trial comparing oral ergocalciferol to a placebo in adult, non-diabetic patients with CKD stages 3-4 and vitamin D deficiency (defined as \< 10ng/ml (\<30nmol/L)). Based on power calculations, 40 subjects will be recruited in each arm as well as 15 healthy control subjects. Subjects will be followed for 7 months in total.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
64
ergocalciferol: 50,000 IU per week for 1 month followed by 50,000 IU per month for 5 months.
Matching placebo at same dose schedule as ergocalciferol
Barts and the London NHS Trust
London, United Kingdom
Microcirculatory function - iontophoresis
Time frame: 6 months
Key clinical parameters of CKD management
Time frame: 6 months
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