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A Trial of Thiamin Supplementation in Patients With Heart Failure

A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Effect of Thiamin Supplementation on Heart Function in Ambulatory Patients With Heart Failure

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT00959075
Enrollment
70
Registered
2009-08-14
Start date
2009-09-30
Completion date
2015-11-30
Last updated
2018-02-27

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Heart Failure

Keywords

Thiamin supplementation, Thiamin deficiency, Heart failure, Improve heart function, Vitamin B1 supplementation

Brief summary

Background: Patients with heart failure (HF) are at increased risk of developing thiamin deficiency (TD). Thiamin (vitamin B1) is required for the production of energy and therefore TD may contribute to the energy depletion commonly observed in the failing heart. Thiamin supplementation trials to date have shown conflicting results and therefore further studies to explain the impact of thiamin supplementation on HF patients with TD is necessary. Objective: The purpose of this study is to determine whether thiamin supplementation in an ambulatory cohort of patients with systolic heart failure will provide any benefit in terms of improved heart function, symptoms, exercise capacity, and quality of life. Description: Patients involved in the study will be given either thiamin supplements or a matching placebo (pills containing no thiamin) for 6 months. The ability of the heart to pump before and after the supplementation will be measured using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)and/or 3D echocardiography. Relevance: This study will determine whether thiamin supplementation improves cardiac function, exercise tolerance and quality of life. Thiamin supplementation is widely available, inexpensive, and safe. Therefore this trial may have a major impact on the optimal management of the expanding population of heart failure patients.

Detailed description

Background: There is now accumulating evidence that patients with heart failure (HF) have a high prevalence of thiamin deficiency (TD). Since thiamin is a key cofactor in the enzyme systems that produce energy from both carbohydrates and fats, TD may contribute to the energy depletion frequently observed in the failing heart. Altered energy reserves with a reduction in myocardial ATP have now been recognized to play a critical role in the development and progression of HF. Therefore, correction of TD may enhance cardiac energy substrate availability and utilization, leading to improvement of ventricular function and symptoms. Primary Hypothesis: The left ventricular ejection fraction in stable, ambulatory patients with systolic heart failure receiving 6 months of oral thiamin supplementation will be significantly higher in comparison with those receiving a placebo. Secondary Hypothesis: In heart failure patients oral thiamin supplementation will 1)have favourable effects on ventricular remodelling (reduction in diastolic and systolic volumes) and regional function; 2)reduce neurohormonal stimulation (BNP and norepinephrine) as well as oxidative stress; 3)improve exercise capacity and 4)improve symptoms and quality of life. Ambulatory patients attending heart failure clinics at Mount Sinai, University Health Network, Trillium Health Centre and St. Michael's Hospital with systolic heart failure (NYHA class II-IV, left ventricular ejection fraction \<45%) will be screened for eligibility to participate in our randomized trial. We will randomize seventy eligible patients using a stratified, permuted block randomization scheme, to be given either 100mg BID of thiamin HCl or a matching placebo BID in a 1:1 ratio to be taken for six months. All study personnel will be blinded to treatment assignment. Participants will have baseline and follow-up visits which include collecting demographic data, history of medication use, symptoms, anthropometrics as well as a physical exam. Left ventricular ejection fraction, volumes, and regional function will be measured using a standardized echocardiogram and cardiac MRI at baseline and after six months of supplementation. At this time, blood markers of thiamin status, oxidative stress (F2 isoprostanes) and neurohormonal activation (norepinephrine and BNP) will also be measured. Participants will also complete a six-minute walk test, a 3-day dietary record, the Living with Heart Failure quality of life instrument and a 24-hour urine collection (to measure urinary thiamin excretion) at both baseline and follow-up visits. Compliance will be measured using returned pill counts and verified by measuring plasma thiamin levels which respond rapidly to thiamin supplementation.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTVitamin B1

100 mg Twice a day

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTPlacebo

Sugar pill

Sponsors

Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario
CollaboratorOTHER
Unity Health Toronto
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* primary diagnosis of ischemic, dilated, idiopathic or valvular heart failure characterized by an ejection fraction of \< 45% (echocardiography or radionuclide scan) * have an optimized medication regimen (ACE inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker, and beta blocker at target doses, or up-titrated to the maximum doses as tolerated) * been stable (on current medication regimen with no hospitalizations for acute decompensated heart failure \> 2 months) prior to entry into the study

Exclusion criteria

Participants will be excluded if they are: * unable or unwilling to provide informed consent * have any concurrent condition which would result in thiamin deficiency, namely gastrointestinal disorders, magnesium deficiency, liver disease, thyrotoxicosis, B12 deficiency, folate deficiency, prolonged diarrhoeal disease, dialysis, prolonged fever or infection, recent myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization (percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass surgery within 3 months), or renal failure * are rapidly deteriorating, who are not on a stable medication regimen (2 months or more) or who have been hospitalized for acute decompensated heart failure in the last 2 months * are on experimental medications * are taking vitamin supplements containing thiamin \>10mg/day * consume excessive alcohol (\> 3 drinks per day), have a documented history of alcoholism or have documented alcoholic cardiomyopathy * have permanent atrial fibrillation * are pregnant or would like to become pregnant * have a right-to-left, bidirectional, or transient right to left cardiac shunts * have clinically suspected wet Beri Beri in the opinion of the treating physician

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Left ventricular ejection fraction measured by CMR or 3D echo at 6 months6 months

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
LV volume, regional function as measure by CMR tagging6 months
Exercise tolerance - distance walked in the standard six-minute walk test6 months
Levels of circulating BNP, norepinephrine and F2-isoprostanes6 months
Scores on the Living with Heart Failure quality of life instrument6 months
Prevalence of TD in an ambulatory HF population6 months

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 1, 2026