Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

There is a high prevalence of hypovitaminosis C and D in our hospital and other acute-care hospitals. Since the correction of these presumed deficiency states is simple, safe and inexpensive, their documented or suspected presence would normally be considered sufficient indication to correct them. However, the common practice is to ignore them. Identification of specific measurable medical consequences of hypovitaminosis C or D would provide a stronger case to treat or prevent in-hospital vitamin deficiency states.

Biochemical deficiencies of vitamin C and D have both been linked to mood disturbance, and hypovitaminosis C reportedly increases blood histamine concentrations.

We recently found that the provision of vitamin C (500 mg twice daily) but not vitamin D (1000 IU twice daily) promptly improved the average mood score of acutely hospitalized patients. We will now conduct a closely similar randomized clinical trial using a more adequate dose of vitamin D, namely 5000 IU/day for up to 10 days.


Clinical Trial Description

HYPOTHESIS:

Adequate vitamin C or vitamin D provision to mentally competent acutely hospitalized patients for 7 to 10 days will correct their biochemical deficiency, improve their mood, and (in the vitamin C-treated patients) reduce blood histamine concentrations.

PROTOCOL:

1. Mentally competent patients fluent in English or French admitted to the surgical or medical units of the hospital will be offered participation.

2. Plasma vitamin C and 25-hydroxyvitamin D, serum C-reactive protein, parathyroid hormone level (a measure of vitamin D adequacy) and blood histamine will be measured in participating patients prior to starting the treatment and after 7 to 10 days of treatment.

3. Within 24 h prior to and within 24 after the 5-10 d treatment course the patient will complete the POMS-B, a validated one-page 30-item questionnaire that assesses mood and energy, and the Distress Thermometer. Patients followed only for the 5-10 d duration of the clinical trial.

4. The chart will be reviewed for age, sex, diagnosis, and pertinent lab results.

5. After the initial blood sample has been drawn and the questionnaire completed the patient will begin treatment either with vitamin C 500 mg twice daily or vitamin D 5000 IU daily; both vitamins will be prescribed by one of the collaborating physicians without knowledge of the person who recruits, assesses and follows the patient. Treatment assignment will be by coin toss.

7. The questionnaire and blood sampling will be repeated after 7 to 10 days of treatment (as determined by feasibility and the situation on the ward) or prior to discharge if discharge is going to occur before the full course of treatment.

8. Neither the patient nor the person who administers the questionnaires will know which patient receives vitamin C or D. The vitamin D and C tablets are distinguishable, so patients motivated to do so could figure out which vitamin they are being prescribed. Since both treatments are being used to correct deficiency diseases which are strongly suspected to affect mood, neither patients, nurses, nor the students following the patients have no basis to anticipate that one treatment will improve their mood more than the other one. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01630720
Study type Interventional
Source Jewish General Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date June 2011
Completion date September 2011