Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00208793

Calcium and Vitamin D vs Markers of Adenomatous Polyps

Calcium, Vitamin D, and Colon Cancer Risk Biomarkers

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
92 (actual)
Sponsor
Emory University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Years – 74 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to test whether calcium and/or vitamin D supplementation favorably affects a set of biomarkers of risk for colon cancer in persons who are at higher than average risk for colon cancer (ie, have already undergone the removal of adenomatous polyps, which are known to be precursors to developing colon cancer).

Detailed description

There is strong biologic plausibility and animal experimental evidence for protection against colorectal cancer by calcium and vitamin D, calcium significantly reduced adenoma recurrence in a large clinical trial in humans (yet the previously reported observational evidence, although generally supportive, is inconsistent), and the observational literature strongly supports protection from vitamin D. A close physiological relationship between calcium and vitamin D has long been known. Yet, other than a possible reduction of colorectal epithelial cell proliferation by calcium, the effects of calcium and vitamin D, individually or jointly, on the normal human colorectal epithelium remain unknown. There have been no clinical trials involving vitamin D individually or jointly with calcium related to colorectal cancer chemoprevention in humans. There are currently no generally accepted pre-neoplastic biomarkers of risk for colorectal cancer other than the possible exception of proliferation markers that, at best, have limited usefulness as individual markers. Based on recent advances in understanding the molecular basis of colorectal cancer, we developed a panel of newer, plausible, reliable, immunohistochemically detected biomarkers that provides molecular phenotyping of the normal appearing colorectal epithelium: 1) inflammation (COX-2), 2) the expression of genes involved in the normal structure and function of the colorectal epithelium that have been found to be altered early in the two major colorectal carcinogenesis pathways (APC, MSH2, MLH1), and 3) a more complete picture of the cell cycle events in colorectal epithelial crypt cells (short and long-term proliferation: MIB-1 and telomerase; differentiation: p21; apoptosis inhibition and promotion: bcl-2, bax, and bak) that has not yet been tested in a chemoprevention trial. To address these needs, we will conduct a preliminary, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 2 x 2 factorial chemoprevention trial (n = 88) of calcium 2,000 mg/day and vitamin D3 800 IU/day, alone and in combination vs placebo over 6 months in patients with recent removal of sporadic adenomatous colorectal polyps, to investigate their effects on the individual components and aggregate profile of our colorectal cancer risk biomarker panel. We will also examine study results stratified by NSAID use and Bsm I vitamin D receptor genotypes. The preliminary estimates of treatment effect sizes and variabilities will be used to refine the biomarker panel and study design and to calculate the needed sample size for a potential full-scale study. We assert that using biological measurements of risk, as they have for ischemic heart disease, will result in a decline in colorectal cancer incidence and mortality. The proposed project is borne of this vision, and has intertwined missions of exploring the efficacy of two plausible and evidentially well-supported dietary agents, calcium and vitamin D, on the modulation of a plausible panel of molecular phenotypic biomarkers of risk for colorectal neoplasia.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTCalcium and vitamin D3 combinedCalcium 2,000 mg (as calcium carbonate) + vitamin D3 800 IU given in equal divided doses twice daily with food over 6 months
DRUGPlaceboPlacebo
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTCalciumCalcium 2,000 mg/day as calcium carbonate in two divided doses with meals over 6 months
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTVitamin D3Vitamin D3 800 IU given as 400 IU twice daily with food over 6 months

Timeline

Start date
2005-05-01
Primary completion
2006-09-01
Completion
2013-02-01
First posted
2005-09-21
Last updated
2013-11-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00208793. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.