Accidental Falls Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomised Controlled Trial of Sunlight and Calcium Supplementation to Reduce Vitamin D Deficiency and Falls in Older People in Residential Care
The proposed study will determine the effect of a public health strategy (ie. increased sun light exposure and increased calcium intake) to reduce falls in older people in residential care using a randomised trial. The primary hypothesis of the trial is that increased appropriate sun light exposure will reduce falls, improve 25 hydroxy vitamin D (25OHD) levels and lower parathyroid hormone (PTH) levels. Secondary hypotheses are that the intervention will reduce accelerated bone turnover, reduce fractures, improve motor function and improve mood.
Specific Aims and Objectives
The proposed trial will determine the effect of a public health strategy (ie increased sun
light exposure and increased calcium intake) to reduce falls and fractures in older people
living in residential care in a randomised trial. The primary hypothesis of the trial is
that increased appropriate sun light exposure will reduce falls, improve 25OHD levels and
lower PTH levels. Secondary hypotheses are that the intervention will reduce accelerated
bone turnover, reduce fractures, improve motor function and improve mood.
Study Design
A randomised, controlled, multi-centre trial will be conducted over 12 months. Cluster
randomization will be performed in hostels (low care residential aged care facilities) that
agree to participate.
Participants
Participants will be recruited primarily from residential aged care facilities in Northern
Sydney that have participated in the FREE study (currently 32 hostels). Men and women will
be invited to participate in the study. Written informed consent from the participant or
their proxy will be obtained.
The following general inclusion criteria will apply to subjects invited to participate:
- Aged 70 years or more
- Ambulant
- Likely to survive for more than 12 months, as assessed by the Implicit Review Tool
employed in the FREE study
- Not taking vitamin D or calcium supplements
- No history of skin cancer in last three years
Interventions
Subjects in the intervention groups will be asked to undergo exposure of approximately 15%
of their body (ie the face, hands and arms) usually between 9.30am - 10am daily during the
year, 5 days per week. During mid summer, these sessions will run between 8.30am - 9am. It
is recognised that it may be practically difficult to achieve this exposure during the
months of June - August and exposure during these winter months may be less effective, but
it considered important the study should run continuously through the year for adherence
purposes. Adherence will be enhanced via the appointment of 'Sunlight Assistants' in each
intervention institution, who will be normally employed in that institution for other duties
but reimbursed for 1.5 hours per day for their duties in the study. During winter, late
autumn and early spring or inclement weather, time lost will be made up during afternoon
exposure on subsequent days. In the calcium and sunlight arm, calcium supplements (Caltrate,
600mg elemental calcium, Whitehall) will be administered to the whole group at the end of
the sunlight exposure session. The Sunlight Assistants will record compliance with tablets.
Subjects in the control group will be provided with a facts sheet about vitamin D deficiency
and how to treat it. They will receive their usual routine care and nutrition. All
participants will receive the medical care usually provided by other health professionals.
Outcomes
Baseline data will be collected by study research staff, who will implement the intervention
in each hostel initially, in conjunction with the Sunlight Assistants. Baseline measures
will include demographic details, medication use, history of falls and fractures. Skin
phenotype will be graded semi-quantitatively at baseline. UV tags will be used to measure
actual exposure of hostel sunlight groups and examine dose -response relationships.
The primary outcome of falls will be assessed after the last cluster recruited has reached
12 months follow-up. Serum 25OHD and PTH will measured every 6 months to allow time trend
and dose response analyses. Falls will be recorded by regular monthly visits to hostels
including review of incident reports and clinical record review, as in the FREE study. Serum
25OHD will be measured using a specific radio-immunoassay with 100% cross-reactivity for
25OHD2 and 25OHD3 (DiaSorin Inc, USA). This assay has a sensitivity of 4nmol/L with an
intra-assay precision of 7.6% and an inter-assay precision of 9.0% and was employed in the
FREE study. Serum levels of intact PTH will also be determined as at baseline as in the FREE
study by a two-site chemiluminescent enzyme-linked immunometric assay on a DPC Immulite 1000
analyser. This assay procedure measures the intact PTH molecule. The sensitivity of this
assay is 1pg/ml and cross reactivity to PTH fragments and related compounds is low. The
assay has a typical intra-assay precision of 5.5% and inter-assay precision of 7.9%.
Biochemistry relevant to calcium metabolism including serum calcium, phosphate, albumin and
creatinine will also be measured at baseline by standard autoanalyser methodology. Bone
turnover will be measured using intact serum aminoterminal propeptide of type I procollagen
(PINP) as a marker of bone formation and serum carboxyterminal telopeptide of type I
collagen (CTX) as a marker of bone resorption, as employed in FREE. PINP will be determined
using an automated immunoassay (Elecsys 170,__ Roche Diagnostics). This assay has a
sensitivity of approximately 5 ng /mL with an intra-assay precision of approximately 2.3 %.
CTX will be determined using an automated immunoassay (Elecsys 170_ Roche Diagnostics) with
an intra-assay precision of approximately 2.0%. These turnover markers will be measured at
baseline and 12 months.
Other secondary outcomes will include motor function measures related to falls risk (static
balance, sit to stand test) assessed at baseline and 12 months using the same methodology
employed in the FREE study. Quadriceps strength and body sway will also be assessed in a
sub-sample. Fractures will be determined by regular visits (monthly) to hostels and
validated by x-ray reports as in the FREE study. The effects of the intervention on mood
will be assessed using the Geriatric Depression Scale.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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