Skip to content

Vitamin D and Osteoporosis Prevention in Elderly African American Women

Vitamin D and Osteoporosis Prevention in Elderly African American Women: A 4-year Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Study to Investigate the Effect of Vitamin D Status in Elderly African American Women

Status
Completed
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01153568
Acronym
NIHD
Enrollment
260
Registered
2010-06-30
Start date
2010-08-31
Completion date
2016-10-31
Last updated
2018-10-03

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

Conditions

Determine Effect of Vitamin D on Bone Health in Elderly African American Women

Keywords

Vitamin D, osteoporosis, african american women

Brief summary

Vitamin D is a hormone that is produced when sunlight is absorbed by the skin. Vitamin D insufficiency has been recognized as a problem in areas where sun exposure is limited, especially in the wintertime. In addition, the more pigmented the skin is, the less capable it is of utilizing sunlight to make vitamin D. Vitamin D plays an important role in helping the body absorb calcium and in building strong bones. It has also been shown to improve muscle function in the elderly. As we get older, our vitamin D levels in the blood go down and this may increase the risk for falls and fractures. If we can improve vitamin D status as we age, we may be able to improve muscle strength and decrease the risk of falls and fractures.

Detailed description

The long-term goal of this project is to develop strategies for the prevention of osteoporotic fractures in African Americans. Most intervention studies have excluded African Americans because of the erroneous belief that osteoporosis is not a major health problem in this population. In fact, the incidence rate of hip fracture in blacks is 50% of the rate in whites. Since longevity is increasing in the black population, osteoporotic fractures will become an even greater problem for this ethnic minority in the future. Furthermore, morbidity and mortality from osteoporotic fractures is greater in blacks. The elderly require higher intake of vitamin D to prevent bone loss resulting from secondary hyperparathyroidism. Calcium with sufficient vitamin D supplementation may decrease fractures in elderly white populations as a result of reduction in bone loss and falls (improved physical performance). The only fracture intervention study to include African Americans-the Women's Health Initiative-used an inadequate dose of vitamin D (400 IU), a dose unlikely to achieve the vitamin D status proposed by U.S. experts: serum 25 hydroxyvitamin D \[25(OH)D\] concentration above 75 nmol/L. No calcium/vitamin D intervention studies on fall prevention or physical performance have included African Americans. As a result of increased skin pigmentation, blacks synthesize less vitamin D from sun exposure. As a result, serum 25(OH)D levels are often in the insufficient range. This is accompanied by secondary hyperparathyroidism, but adult blacks have a relative skeletal resistance to PTH, so that they have lower bone turnover. They also have more efficient renal conservation of calcium starting in childhood. Addition of vitamin D3 to a calcium-sufficient African American postmenopausal population does not prevent bone loss. The calcium/vitamin D requirements of black adults may be lower than white adults through midlife. However, the elderly require more vitamin D to produce the higher 25(OH)D levels required to overcome the hyperparathyroidism associated with aging. The skeleton of elderly African Americans appears to be susceptible to the increasing parathyroid hormone levels of old age. Bone loss accelerates and bone turnover markers increase in elderly African Americans just as in whites. The specific aims of this project are to determine if dietary supplementation with calcium/vitamin D will safely reduce bone loss and bone turnover and improve physical performance in elderly African Americans. We will enroll 250 African American women in a four-year vitamin D3 intervention trial where serum 25(OH)D will be maintained at an optimum level above 75 nmol/L. Adequate calcium intake will be ensured. Functional markers of vitamin D including bone density, serum PTH, and bone turnover will be measured. The NIH Conference on Vitamin D and Health in the 21st Century, September 5-6, 2007 concluded that research in this population is a high priority.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTVitamin D 3

Patients will bew given a single capsule to take once daily

OTHERplacebo

placebo tablets

Sponsors

National Institute on Aging (NIA)
CollaboratorNIH
Winthrop University Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

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

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
60 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

1. Ambulatory women older than 60 years of age. Self declared as African Americans. 2. 20 nmol/L \< serum 25(OH)D level \< 65 nmol/L. 3. Willingness to take study drug and participate for four years in the trial. 4. Willingness to refrain from the use of self-administered supplements during the trial.

Exclusion criteria

1. Serum 25(OH)D levels ≤ 20 nmol/L or ≥ 65 nmol/L. 2. BMD total hip below - 2.5 standard deviation (using NHANES III adult young white men and women as the point of reference) or history of osteoporotic fracture. 3. Moderate to severe fracture in one or more vertebrae by Instant Vertebral Assessment on DXA. 4. Treatment with HRT, SERMS, calcitonin, PTH, androgens, bisphosphonates, phosphate or anabolic steroids during 6 months prior to entry. 5. Use of systemic corticosteroids (oral or IV) within the last year at an average dose of greater than 5 mg per day of oral prednisone or equivalent for a period of three months or more prior to screening. 6. Hypercalcemia (serum calcium \> 10.6 mg (dl) or history of primary hyperparathyroidism. 7. History of chronic liver disease, chronic renal insufficiency, Parkinson's, metabolic bone disease, hematologic tumors, rheumatologic disease requiring steroids, malabsorption or new diagnosis or active treat-ment of cancer 12 months prior to inclusion. 8. Use of medications that influence bone metabolism (e.g. anticonvulsants). 9. Significant deviation from normal in either: history, physical examination or laboratory tests as evaluated by the Principle Investigator. Participants with a history of hypercalciuria, nephrolithiasis and active sarcoidosis will also be excluded. 10. Participation in another investigational trial 30 days prior to screening. 11. Spinal disease that affects interpretation of bone densitometry like scoliosis with a Cobb angle greater than 15o, history of surgery at lumbosacral spine. 12. Bilateral hip replacement. 13. Currently smoking more than 10 cigarettes daily. 14. Body width on DXA \> 25 cm. 15. Patients who are deemed unsafe to perform muscular function testing as evaluated by the investigator. \---------- Study participants should live close to the study site, as this study requires multiple visits over a four year period.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
1. To determine if vitamin D supplementation sufficient to raise serum 25(OH)D levels above 75 nmol/L (30 ng/mL) for four years will reduce bone density loss, markers of bone turnover, and serum PTH in elderly black women4 years2\. To determine whether such supplementation will inhibit the decline in physical performance with aging.

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
To evaluate the harms of vitamin D intakes that raise 25(OH)D levels above 75 nmol/L for four years in a calcium sufficient population4 yearsThis research will fill an important gap in knowledge about the potential benefit of vitamin D supplementation in elderly black women. While many experts agree that vitamin D intake should be increased in the elderly, few pertinent studies have included black participants, who represent a vulnerable population due to their low serum 25(OH)D. If vitamin D supplementation proves to be beneficial in this minority group, that would suggest the appropriateness of intake recommendations similar to those proposed for white populations.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 20, 2026