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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07487831

The Impact of Salt Intake on Sodium in the Skin and Inflammatory Skin Disease

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of California, San Francisco · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to demonstrate the feasibility of a trial that examines the impact of changes in dietary sodium intake on skin sodium levels, atopic dermatitis, and psoriasis. In addition, it aims to generate preliminary data to begin to answer the following questions: 1. Is there an association between skin sodium concentration and atopic dermatitis and psoriasis severity? 2. Are changes in dietary sodium are associated with changes in skin sodium concentration and atopic dermatitis and psoriasis severity? Researchers will compare sodium tablets to a placebo (a look-alike substance that contains no drug) to specifically examine the impact of altering sodium intake. Participants will: * Follow a low-salt diet for the duration of the 13-week study * Take sodium chloride tablets every day for 5 weeks followed by a placebo every day for 5 weeks after a 2-week washout period, or vice versa * Visit the clinic up to 4 times to answer questionnaires, provide bio samples, complete dietary recalls, and undergo non-contrast sodium MRI

Detailed description

The central hypothesis of this proposal is that excess dietary sodium (consumed primarily as salt) is concentrated in the skin as a physiologic response to poor barrier function, and that a low-sodium diet can improve inflammatory skin disease severity. This study is meant to generate pilot data to complement the iDOSE trial (NCT07447063). The study will recruit 50 individuals (10 participants with atopic dermatitis, 10 with psoriasis, and up to 30 'healthy' individuals without skin disease) and measure skin sodium concentration using a non-invasive sodium MRI technique. Healthy individuals will only undergo sodium scans at Visit 1. Participants with atopic dermatitis and psoriasis will be counseled on how to follow the DASH low-sodium diet and asked to maintain the diet for the duration of the 13-week study. After a 1-week wash-in period on the diet alone, they will be asked to add daily sodium chloride tablets in a self-controlled cross-over design. Participants will be randomized in equal groups to either start with sodium tables or placebo tablets. One group will receive sodium tablets for weeks 2-6, no tablets for a washout period during weeks 7-8, then placebo tablets for weeks 9-13. The other group will receive placebo tablets for weeks 2-6, no tablets for a washout period during weeks 6-8 then sodium tablets for weeks 8-13. Sodium consumption will be evaluated using dietary recall questionnaires and urine biomarkers and eczema and psoriasis activity and severity will be measured using validated severity scores and patient-reported outcomes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGSodium chloride tabletsDuring the 5-week long sodium tablet intervention period, participants will receive five 1 g sodium chloride tablets each morning and four 1 g sodium chloride tablets each evening. Each sodium chloride tablet will contain 0.394 g or 17 mmol of sodium
OTHERPlacebo TabletsDuring the 5-week long placebo period, participants will receive five placebo tablets each morning and four placebo tablets each evening.

Timeline

Start date
2026-03-16
Primary completion
2028-03-17
Completion
2028-03-17
First posted
2026-03-23
Last updated
2026-03-23

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07487831. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.