Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Unknown

UnknownNCT01115842

Vitamin D and Inflammatory Cytokine Levels After Acute Myocardial Infraction (MI)

Intervention Study Measuring Inflammatory Cytokine Levels in the Serum of Patients Who Underwent an Acute MI, and the Influence of Vitamin D on These Levels

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
Meir Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Vitamin D is known to have immune-modulator effects including suppression of proinflammatory cytokine expression and regulation of immune cell activity. Vitamin D supplementation has been associated with a reduction in pro-inflammatory cytokines in patients with heart failure, and vitamin D deficiency has been associated with higher rates of myocardial infarcts. The levels of pro and anti-inflammatory cytokines also effect the outcome after acute coronary events. The proposed interventional study is targeted as a feasibility study targeted at assessing the role of vitamin D as an anti-inflammatory mediator. The study is planned as a randomized open label interventional trial. The study will be conducted of 50 adult patients (25 interventional group, 25 control), all from the internal ward in "Meir" medical center. Patients which are admitted after an acute coronary event will be randomized to the Vitamin D supplementation group or to the control group. the vitamin D group will receive 4000IU per day of vitamin D for five days. Cytokine levels will be measured at day 1 and at day 5. follow up will be continued for 6 months Primary end point: Levels of immune mediating cytokines (CRP, TNF-α. Il-2, IL-6, IL-12 and IL-10) after a five day intervention in patients serum. Secondary endpoints: Any major cardiovascular event within follow-up period. Any death of any cause during follow-up period Expected results: the investigators expect vitamin D supplementation after a pro-inflammatory state such as an acute coronary event, combined with conventional therapy, to result in decreased levels of inflammatory serum bio-markers.

Detailed description

Inclusion criteria: * Acute coronary syndrome (as defined previously). * No advanced renal disease (creatinine levels \< 1.8 for men and 1.5 for women). * No known parathyroid or calcium homeostasis abnormalities * Baseline Calcium levels within normal limits. * No vitamin D supplementation taken within 4 months of current admission. * No coexisting pro-inflammatory conditions (e.g. infection, active autoimmune disease) * No coexisting immune-mediator agents (e.g. corticosteroids, anti-TNF or other biological agents). * No participation in other interventional studies. * Signing an informed consent form. Exclusion criteria: * Advanced renal failure * Abnormal serum calcium levels upon admission * Primary parathyroid or calcium homeostasis abnormalities. * Coexisting pro-inflammatory conditions (e.g. infection, active autoimmune disease) * Coexisting immune-mediator agents (e.g. corticosteroids, anti-TNF or other biological agents) * Participation in other interventional studies. * Inability or refusal to sign an informed consent.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGVitamin DVitamin D 4000IU per day for 5 days

Timeline

Start date
2010-06-01
Primary completion
2010-12-01
Completion
2011-01-01
First posted
2010-05-04
Last updated
2010-08-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01115842. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.