Tuberculosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Antimicrobial Peptide LL-37 (Cathelicidin) Production in Active Tuberculosis Disease: Role of Vitamin D Supplementation
Tuberculosis is a disease caused by a bacterium (a germ) that can cause illness in any organ
of the body, but most frequently causes disease of the lungs. TB is short for tuberculosis.
Treating TB requires several months (usually 6 months) of treatment, with the first 2 months
being intensive treatment with usually four medicines. Treatment is needed to keep the
infection from getting worse and to prevent death from TB.
Vitamin D is a hormone present in the human body to manage levels of some essential
electrolytes such as calcium and phosphate. Vitamin D is important for bone formation and
prevention of bone breakdown (osteoporosis) as the investigators age. There is also new
evidence that links vitamin D to function of our immune system as well. Even though our
bodies can make vitamin D and can also obtain vitamin D from our diet, most adults,
especially patients with tuberculosis have low vitamin D levels (are vitamin D deficient)
that need to be corrected. Full correction of low vitamin D levels requires 6 weeks or more
of weekly vitamin D supplements. There are several benefits to correcting vitamin D
deficiency (better bone health, better balance of calcium and phosphate), but it is not
known whether correcting vitamin D deficiency will lead to a better immune response to
tuberculosis. Preliminary data does suggest that vitamin D increases the levels of an
antimicrobial molecule (cathelicidin LL-37) in the body, possibly leading to better immunity
against tuberculosis. The primary objective of this pilot study is to assess the
relationship of vitamin D levels in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis to levels of
LL-37 cathelicidin in sputum and whole blood. The results of this study are needed in
preparation for larger studies that will evaluate the role of vitamin D supplementation as
adjunctive therapy to standard medical treatment for tuberculosis.
1.0 Introduction and Background
Tuberculosis remains an enormous public health problem and a major cause of morbidity and
mortality throughout the world. The WHO estimates that 8.8 million new cases of tuberculosis
occurred worldwide in 2005, along with 1.6 million TB related deaths. New challenges in TB
control include the HIV epidemic, as well as the emergence of multidrug resistant (MDR) and
extremely drug resistant (XDR) strains of tuberculosis which are associated with high
morbidity and mortality. While cure rates for drug susceptible TB can reach the >90% range
given the appropriate infrastructure to diagnose and treat patients, cure rates for MDR-TB
are much lower and, at best, approach 60% according to the latest estimates by WHO. In many
parts of the world, second line drugs to treat MDR-TB are not available. Not only is there
an urgent need for novel TB treatment regimens, but adjunctive therapeutic modalities need
to be explored with the goal of maximizing clinical response for both patients with drug
susceptible and drug resistant disease.
The use of vitamin D as primary or adjunctive TB therapy has a long history. Therapeutic
doses of oral vitamin D supplementation for TB treatment were first pioneered in the 1950's
by Jacques Charpy, who noted excellent results in cutaneous TB disease. Subsequently,
vitamin D has been used as both primary and adjunctive therapy in pulmonary tuberculosis,
but this practice fell out of favor as effective antimycobacterial chemotherapy became
widely available in the latter half of the twentieth century.
More recently, however, there has been a resurgence of interest in vitamin D as an effective
adjunctive therapy in tuberculosis. Recent reports indicate that vitamin D may have a
pronounced immunomodulatory role in the pathogenesis of tuberculosis within the human host.
It is well known that areas of granulomatous inflammation in TB are sites of increased
vitamin D production stemming from activated macrophages and Th1 lymphocytes within the
granuloma Recently, the immunomodulatory function of increased vitamin D levels at sites of
TB involvement has been demonstrated, in that 1,25(OH)2D, the active metabolite form of
vitamin D, has been found to induce antimycobacterial activity in vitro in both monocytes
and macrophages.
One proposed pathway for this observed immunomodulatory effect of vitamin D in TB infection
involves the toll-like receptor (TLR) signaling pathways of the innate immune system. Liu et
al demonstrated that macrophage TLR binding of M. tuberculosis antigen upregulates the
expression of cellular 1 hydroxylase, resulting in higher levels of active 1, 25(OH)2D. It
was also shown that 1, 25(OH)2D in turn binds the nuclear vitamin D receptor (VDR), which
activates a downstream signaling cascade resulting in the upregulation of several aspects of
the innate immune response, including the induction of a newly described anti-microbial
peptide LL-37, a cathelicidin. Cathelicidins, in addition to their broad spectrum
antimicrobial activity, also possess chemotactic properties for neutrophils, monocytes and T
cells, among other functions within the immune system.
While this mechanism of action for vitamin D was demonstrated in vitro, little clinical work
has been done to validate this piece of knowledge in clinical practice and in the care of TB
patients. As proxy for in vivo studies, subsequent experiments by Liu et al evaluated
induction of cathelicidin by TLR activation of macrophages in sera from African American and
Caucasian subjects. These experiments demonstrated failure to induce detectable levels of
cathelicidin mRNA in samples from African American patients, who are known to be
significantly more vitamin D deficient than Caucasians due to difference in vitamin D
production in the skin. The difference in cathelicidin mRNA levels was corrected upon
supplementation of deficient sera to therapeutic levels of 25(OH)D3 prior to TLR
stimulation.
Given the preliminary results of these in vitro studies, we propose a clinical pilot
investigation of the relationship between vitamin D levels and cathelicidin production in TB
patients. It is well known that the majority of TB patients are deficient in vitamin D, but
it is unknown whether the deficiency has functional consequences for treatment response and
relapse rates. While recent in vitro data suggests that vitamin D supplementation of recent
TB contacts does improve their immune response to Mycobacterium tuberculosis as measured in
whole blood assays, clinical trials of vitamin D supplementation in latent or active TB
disease have not been undertaken. In preparation for larger trials that would be needed to
address this clinical question, we propose that the clinical relationship between
physiologic levels of vitamin D supplementation and effect on cathelicidin production within
the host needs to be studied, given recent suggestions from in vitro studies that ability to
generate adequate cathelicidin levels may have an impact on quality and effectiveness of
host immune defense against M. tuberculosis.
2.0 Objectives
2.1 Overall Objective
The primary objective of this pilot study is to assess the relationship of 25-hydroxy
vitamin D levels in patients with active pulmonary tuberculosis to levels of
LL-37/cathelicidin in sputum, saliva, and whole blood.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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