Insulin Resistance Clinical Trial
Official title:
Can Vitamin D Replacement Reduce Insulin Resistance In South Asians With Vitamin D Deficiency?
This study will test the hypothesis that 6 months of periodic high dose Vitamin D3
replacement (200,000 and 100,000 units cholecalciferol, oral liquid drops at 6 to 8 week
intervals) followed in-between by daily 1000 units, decreases insulin resistance by HOMA2-IR
≥ 0.36, in comparison to control, standard dose Vitamin D3 1000IU/ day for 6 months, in south
Asians with both Vitamin D deficiency (defined as 25 Hydroxy vitamin D < 25nmol/l) and
insulin resistance (defined as HOMA1 -IR≥ 1.93).
The hypothesis formed suggests that insulin resistance developed in South Asians is
explained, at least in part, by the presence of Vitamin D Deficiency (VDD). Therefore if the
VDD is reversed/ 'normalised into target range' using Vitamin D therapy in individuals at
risk of diabetes, then markers of insulin resistance should reduce from baseline values.
However, current UK recommended doses of Vitamin D do not adequately replenish severe VDD,
common in South Asians, back into the target range and therefore will not reduce insulin
resistance markers. Therefore only higher pharmacological doses are able to replace severe
Vitamin D deficiency adequately and improve insulin resistance markers.
Cardio metabolic risk in South Asians
Incident Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) within the South Asian Diaspora has failed to decline
in parallel with other migrant groups. Rates of coronary disease in middle-aged South Asians,
50% higher than UK background, are concerning and place a growing socio-economic burden on
communities and health-care providers. Concerted efforts to recognise and manage early
CVD-risk within this highly susceptible group are essential if persistent health inequalities
are to be adequately addressed. Significant variation in CVD implies differential interaction
of risk factors across populations or the presence of additional factors accounting for
increased risk. Metabolic conditions prevalent in South Asians and characterised by insulin
resistance, glucose disorders and dyslipidaemia may be key to addressing observed CVD
differences. Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) develops early in South Asians and once
established carries a high risk of vascular mortality. Prediabetes is more common in South
Asians and associate independently with vascular and diabetes-risk. Ethnic pre-disposition to
central obesity and its metabolic consequences is clearly important in determining CVD risk,
but even when combined with other factors (e.g. social-economic deprivation, smoking, blood
pressure) fails to entirely account for observed variation in vascular events between groups.
Assumptions that cultural incompatibility and medication compliance influence CVD outcomes
are largely unsubstantiated, implying unidentified factors contribute to increased risk in
South Asians.
Vitamin D Deficiency (VDD)
There has been a resurgence of interest in the recognition and treatment of VDD beyond
established roles in metabolic bone disease. Epidemiological studies implicate vitamin D and
calcium homeostasis in a plethora of non-skeletal immune-based chronic diseases. Proposed
mechanisms accounting for these pleiotropic actions focus upon well-characterised in-vitro
immuno-modulatory effects, intracellular calcium signalling and the recent finding that the
Vitamin D receptor is ubiquitous. The emerging science connecting biochemical deficiency,
molecular or cytokine responses and disease pathogenesis is well-reviewed. VDD appears to
predispose to vascular, rheumatic and neuropathic inflammation, hypertension, metabolic
syndrome and atherosclerosis.
Data from large observational cohorts and trials designed for bone-related outcomes
consistently demonstrate inverse relationships between (1) serum 25-hydroxy-cholecalciferol
(25(OH)VitD) and prevalent T2DM/CVD or conversely, (2) supplementation and incident all cause
mortality. Baseline serum 25(OH)VitD predicts future glycaemic status, whilst VDD associates
with markers of insulin resistance, coronary calcification, aortic stiffness, left
ventricular mass, endothelial dysfunction, and hypertension. Diabetes-related micro and
macro-vascular complications may be exacerbated by VDD.
Reported Vitamin D intervention studies have so far been limited by small sample sizes,
inadequate replacement and short intervention times. Whist variability of study populations,
dosage regimes and endpoints has made comparison of available intervention data difficult,
for metabolic outcome trends definitely favour enhanced insulin sensitivity and action. One
study using 700 IUD3 daily for two years, demonstrated glucose reduction in IFG comparable
with intensive lifestyle intervention of the Diabetes Prevention Project.
Conversely the WHI study failed to demonstrate any Vitamin D effects on either glycaemic or
blood pressure outcomes with a possibly sub-therapeutic 400 IU daily replacement which
increased serum 25(OH)Vitamin D by an average of 7nmol/l. In the absence of well-designed
supplementation trials, the strongest evidence continues to lie with prospective association
studies that can neither confirm causality nor exclude confounding influences.
The optimal Vitamin D level is defined as >75nmol/l, adequate level 50-75nmol/l, sub-optimal
25-50nmol/l and deficient <25nmol/l.
The South Asian VDD phenotype
It is plausible T2DM and CVD prevalence in South Asians relates directly to sub-optimal
Vitamin D status. This population is ideal for prospective phenotyping and intervention
trials as it remains the largest reservoir of endemic VDD in the UK (Leicester population
data: 72% 25(OH) Vitamin D < 20 nmol/l).
Recognised causes of VDD susceptibility in South Asians include 1) skin complexion, 2) lack
of sunlight exposure, 3) vegetarianism, and 4) adipose tissue vitamin sequestration, although
surprisingly there is lack of evidence supporting a specific dosing regime in this Vitamin D
deplete population. Consensus algorithms for replacement based predominantly on bone-related
outcomes in Caucasians are unlikely to adequately address VDD in South Asians, nor indeed
associated cardio-metabolic effects based upon the currently available trial evidence. The
prospect of vitamin D supplementation as a potential intervention for both diabetes and other
cardiovascular risk factors carries considerable public health implication. Far from an
ethnic minority niche, VDD prevalence is set to rise in line with Western obesity trends. It
is therefore imperative the investigators determine the potential of this most simple of
treatments in the prevention of cardio-metabolic diseases.
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