Vitamin B6 (Pyridoxine) |
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Clinical Trial: Vitamin K Supplementation in Post-Menopausal Osteopenia
This study is no longer recruiting patients.
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Purpose
| Condition | Intervention |
|---|---|
| Post-Menopausal Osteoporosis Post-Menopausal Osteopenia | Drug: vitamin K1 (phylloquinone) |
MedlinePlus related topics: Osteoporosis
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Prevention, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Official Title: Evaluation of the Clinical Use of Vitamin K Supplementation in Post-Menopausal Women with Osteopenia (ECKO Trial)
Secondary Outcomes: 1. The potential adverse effects from long-term vitamin K1 supplementation.; 2. Whether vitamin K1 supplementation affects levels of bone formation markers and bone resorption markers.; 3. Whether vitamin K1 supplementation affects the degree of carboxylation of OC, a major vitamin K-dependent protein in bone.; 4. Whether vitamin K1 supplementation affects health-related quality of life.; 5. Whether vitamin K1 supplementation decreases the risk of having fragility fractures.; 6. Whether ApoE modulates the effect of vitamin K on bone.
Expected Total Enrollment: 450
Study start: January 2002; Study completion: July 2007
Last follow-up: September 2006; Data entry closure: December 2006
Osteoporosis is major cause of morbidity and mortality in Canadian postmenopausal women. It is a systemic disease characterized by low bone mass and deterioration of bone microarchitecture, resulting in bone fragility and an increased risk of fractures. One in six women over the age of 50 have osteoporosis. The lifetime risk of an osteoporotic fracture for an average 50 year-old Canadian woman is >40%. The annual health care costs for osteoporotic fractures in Canada have been estimated to exceed $1.3 billion.
Recent data suggest that vitamin K supplements may decrease bone loss and prevent fractures. Vitamin K is a co-factor of gamma-glutamyl carboxylase, an enzyme that catalyzes the gamma-carboxylation of glutamic acid residues in bone matrix proteins such as osteocalcin. Vitamin K has been reported to enhance bone formation in both in vitro studies and in vivo studies in animals. Vitamin K levels are low in individuals with osteoporosis and in patients with osteoporotic fractures. The few studies examining vitamin K supplementation in humans have showed promising results with no significant side effects, but these studies had significant methodological shortcomings such as inadequate sample size and lack of randomization.
The primary objective of our study is to examine whether vitamin K supplementation will increase bone mineral density in postmenopausal women with osteopenia. Our secondary objectives are to examine the possible adverse effects from long-term vitamin K supplementation, to investigate whether vitamin K will decrease risk of fractures and to determine if vitamin K affects quality of life. Our hypotheses are that vitamin K increases bone mineral density in postmenopausal women, and that there are no significant adverse effects from vitamin K supplementation.
Eligibility
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Inclusion Criteria:
Postmenopausal: One year since the natural cessation of menses, or Hysterectomy with either postmenopausal status confirmed by FSH lab values, or age 55 and above AND 2. Osteopenic: T-score at baseline has to be between (and including) -1.0 and
-2.0 in the lumbar spine (L1-L4), total hip or femoral neck, and the lowest reading of the above three measurements must be between -1.0 and -2.0
Exclusion Criteria:
- Women ever having had a fragility fracture after age 40;
- Women currently on anticoagulants, previously on anticoagulants in the past 3 months, or expected to be on anticoagulants in the near future;
- Women on hormone replacement therapy, raloxifene, bisphosphonates or calcitonin during the past 3 months;
- Women who have ever been on a bisphosphonate for more than 6 months;
- Women previously diagnosed with Paget''''s disease, hyperparathyroidism, hyperthyroidism or other metabolic bone diseases;
- Women with decompensated diseases of the liver, kidney, pancreas, lung, or heart;
- Women with a history of active cancer in the past 5 years;
- Women taking mega-doses of vitamin A (more than 10,000 iu per day) or E (more than 400 iu per day);
- Women involved in other clinical trials;
- Any women who, in the opinion of the principal investigator, is at poor medical or psychiatric risk for the study.
Location Information
Canada, Ontario
University Health Network, Osteoporosis Department, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 2C4, Canada
St. Michael''''s Hospital Health Centre, Toronto, Ontario, M5C 2T2, Canada
Sunnybrook & Women''''s College Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 1B2, Canada
Mt. Sinai Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 1X5, Canada
University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, M5S 3E2, Canada
Angela M Cheung, MD, PhD, Principal Investigator, University Health Network, University of Toronto
More Information
Last Updated: September 12, 2005
Record first received: September 6, 2005
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00150969
Health Authority: Canada: Health Canada
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-09-13

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