Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00570895

Effect of Vitamin C on Iron Absorption

Effect of Ascorbic Acid on Iron Absorption From Ferrous Fumarate

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
22 (actual)
Sponsor
Baylor College of Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
4 Years – 8 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Iron deficiency is a common health problem worldwide. Ferrous fumarate (a form of iron) is often added to foods in an effort to prevent iron deficiency. Vitamin C can improve the amount of iron that the body absorbs, therefore it is often added to foods too. However, we don't know if vitamin C really increases the absorption of iron from ferrous fumarate. This study will measure the iron absorption in children from a meal containing some ferrous fumarate with and without vitamin C. The study will include 4 visits to the Children's Nutrition Research Center in Houston, TX.

Detailed description

This study involves four outpatient visits. Two test meals will be given (during visits 2 and 3) and two blood draws will be done (visits 3 and 4). A 2-3 hour fast prior to the visit is required. Therefore, subjects may come in first thing in the morning (for breakfast meal), at lunch, or in the afternoon (snack). Subjects may be scheduled to come in during the week or on weekends; however, each individual subject will need to return at the same time of day for each subsequent visit. Visit procedures are described below. Visit 1: Subjects will be admitted to the GCRC as an outpatient after a 2-3h fast and given a reference dose of 1mg iron-58 sulfate as an aqueous solution with 50mg ascorbic acid. They will be observed for 2h after this dose and water will be freely available. No food will be allowed. After 2h subjects will be discharged home and food allowed. Visit 2: One to 10 days later subjects will be again admitted as an outpatient after a 2-3h fast. They will consume a meal of a bread muffin labelled with 4mg of iron-57 as ferrous fumarate, and a glass of apple juice containing 0 or 25mg ascorbic acid. The order of ascorbic acid supplementation or non-supplementation will be decided by random. No food will be allowed after the meal. After 2h subjects will be discharged home and food allowed. Visit 3: Two weeks (+/- 3 days) later they will be readmitted after a 2-3h fast and the second visit repeated. During this admission the apple juice will contain either 0 or 25mg ascorbic acid, the opposite of what was given to the subject in visit 2. Immediately prior to administration of the second test meal, 10mL blood will be drawn for measurement of iron nutritional parameters (e.g. CBC, serum ferritin) and iron isotope ratio measurement. Incorporation of iron-57 will be used to calculate iron absorption from the test meal given during visit 2, and incorporation of iron-58 used to measure absorption from the reference dose (a measure of iron status). No food will be allowed after the meal and blood draw. After 2h subjects will be discharged home and food allowed. Visit 4: Two weeks (+/- 3 days) later subjects will be admitted for a 10mL blood draw as described above. Incorporation of iron-57 will reflect the absorption of ferrous fumarate from the test meal given during visit 3.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTVitamin CVisit 1: Subjects will receive 1mg iron-58 sulfate as an aqueous solution with 50mg ascorbic acid. Visit 2: Subjects will consume a meal of a bread muffin labelled with 4mg of iron-57 as ferrous fumarate, and a glass of apple juice containing 0 or 25mg ascorbic acid. Visit 3: During this admission the apple juice will contain either 0 or 25mg ascorbic acid, the opposite of what was given to the subject in visit 2.

Timeline

Start date
2008-01-01
Primary completion
2008-04-01
Completion
2008-05-01
First posted
2007-12-11
Last updated
2020-06-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00570895. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.