The VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL (VITAL; NCT 01169259) is an ongoing randomized clinical trial in 25,871 U.S. men and women investigating whether taking daily dietary supplements of vitamin D3 (2000 IU) or omega-3 fatty acids (Omacor® fish oil, 1 gram) reduces the risk of developing cancer, heart disease, and stroke in people who do not have a prior history of these illnesses. This ancillary study is being conducted among participants in VITAL and will examine whether vitamin D or fish oil: 1) reduces risk of clinical depressive syndrome, 2) yields better mood scores over time, compared to placebo.
VITAL-DEP: Depression Endpoint Prevention in the VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL is a randomized clinical trial of vitamin D (in the form of vitamin D3 \[cholecalciferol\]) and marine omega-3 fatty acid (eicosapentaenoic acid \[EPA\] + docosahexaenoic acid \[DHA\]) supplements in the prevention of depression in older adults. Existing data from laboratory studies, epidemiologic research, limited clinical trials research suggest that these nutritional agents may reduce risk of depression or improve mood, but large primary prevention trials with adequate dosing and lengthy treatment durations in general populations are lacking. Eligible participants will be assigned by chance (like a coin toss) to one of four groups: (1) daily vitamin D3 and omega-3; (2) daily vitamin D3 and omega-3 placebo; (3) daily vitamin D placebo and omega-3; or (4) daily vitamin D placebo and omega-3 placebo. Participants have an equal chance of being assigned to any of these four groups and a 3 out of 4 chance of getting at least one active agent. Participants in all groups will take two pills each day -- one softgel that contains either vitamin D3 or vitamin D placebo and one capsule that contains either omega-3 or omega-3 placebo. Participants will receive their study pills in convenient calendar packages via U.S. mail. Participants will also fill out a short (15-20 minute) questionnaire each year. The questionnaire asks about health; lifestyle habits such as physical exercise, diet, and smoking; use of medications and dietary supplements; family history of illness, and new medical diagnoses. The questionnaire also includes specific questions pertaining to mood. Occasionally, participants may receive a phone call from study staff to collect information or to clarify responses on the questionnaire. Primary aims of 1) reduction in risk of clinical depressive syndrome and 2) yielding of better mood scores over time will be address in the full VITAL cohort of 20,000. Secondary aims will be addressed in sub-set of participants. The secondary aims will address whether: 1) among a subset of 1,000 participants evaluated at a Clinical and Translational Science Center (CTSC), the agents reduce risk of depression and yield better mood scores among persons with known risk factors for late-life depression; 2) among a subset of 1,000 participants evaluated at a CTSC, the agents reduce risk of major depression and yield better mood scores among persons with sub-syndromal depressive symptoms; 3) among all VITAL participants, African-American race (African-Americans have high risk of Vitamin D deficiency) modifies effects of vitamin D3 supplementation on late-life depression risk and on mood scores; 4) among a subset of participants, baseline plasma levels of vitamin D and omega-3 fatty acids are related to depression risk and/or modify agent effects. Thus, VITAL-DEP will address simultaneously the impact of both vitamin D and fish oil for universal, selective and indicated prevention of late-life depression.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
18,353
Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), 2000 IU per day
Omacor, 1 capsule per day. Each capsule of Omacor contains 840 milligrams of marine omega-3 fatty acids (465 mg of eicosapentaenoic acid \[EPA\] and 375 mg of docosahexaenoic acid \[DHA\]).
Fish oil placebo
Vitamin D placebo
Brigham and Women's Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Number of Participants With a Depression Event
Depression syndrome will be determined by presence of clinical diagnosis, treatment and/or above-threshold symptoms on mood questionnaire (e.g., PHQ) items. This is an event outcome, where the depression event was defined as a new self-report of physician/clinician-diagnosed depression, treatment (medication and/or counseling) for depression, or presence of clinically relevant depressive symptoms (PHQ-8 total score \>=10 points) on the annual study questionnaires that were administered over a median 5.3 years of randomized treatment and follow-up. Participants were followed for the depression event until the occurrence of the endpoint, death, or the end of the trial, whichever came first. The Outcome Measure table shows the counts of depression events in each randomized group by treatment.
Time frame: From date of randomization until the date of the occurrence of the endpoint, death, or the end of the trial, whichever came first, assessed up to a median of 5.3 years of follow-up
Mood Scores
Mood scores are evaluated by the 8-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-8). The measured outcome was the total PHQ-8 score. The PHQ-8 includes items corresponding to the criteria for major depression. Each of the 8 items can be scored as 0, 1, 2, or 3 points (higher score means worse symptoms). The 8 items are summed to a total PHQ-8 score. The range for the PHQ-8 score is 0-24 points; higher scores denote worse mood or depressive symptoms. The PHQ-8 was measured annually at baseline and at up to 5 follow-up times (for a maximum of 6 time points). Data from all time points was used to determine the mean differences in change in mood scores over all follow-up by randomized treatment. Per protocol, the Statistical Analysis section shows the results for the primary outcome of mean difference in overall change in PHQ-8 scores comparing active and placebo groups (for each agent).
Time frame: Baseline, follow-up year 1, follow-up year 2, follow-up year 3, follow-up year 4, and follow-up year 5
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