| Literature DB >> 21689448 |
Alexandra Papaioannou1, Courtney C Kennedy, Lora Giangregorio, George Ioannidis, Janet Pritchard, David A Hanley, Leonardo Farrauto, Justin DeBeer, Jonathan D Adachi.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There remains uncertainty regarding the appropriate therapeutic management of hip fracture patients. The primary aim of our study was to examine whether large loading doses in addition to daily vitamin D offered any advantage over a simple daily low-dose vitamin D regimen for increasing vitamin D levels.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21689448 PMCID: PMC3134427 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-12-135
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Patients Screened.
Characteristics of study sample at baseline, according to treatment allocation†
| Placebo | 50,000 | 100,000 | Missing Cases (Placebo/50,000/100,000) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years | 78.5 (10.3) | 82.9 (8.7) * | 73.9(12.4) * | 1/0/0 |
| Male (SD) | 77.9 (8.4) | 77.9 (11.2) | 69.5 (12.9) | |
| Female (SD) | 78.8 (11.5) | 85.2 (6.4) | 81.7 (6.6) | |
| Gender | 1/0/0 | |||
| Male (%) | 7 (35) | 7 (32) | 14 (64) | |
| Female (%) | 13 (65) | 15 (68) | 8 (36) | |
| Height, cm | 163.8 (11.4) | 162.9 (10.1) | 169.7 (12.6) | 2/3/2 |
| Male (SD) | 174.8 (10.2) | 173.5 (4.7) | 175.0 (10.3) | |
| Female (SD) | 158.7 (7.9) | 156.7 (6.3) | 158.2 (7.3) | |
| Weight, kg | 70.6 (25.4) | 64.8 (18.1) | 72.1 (15.8) | 2/2/2 |
| Male (SD) | 89.1 (30.3) | 79.4 (12.7) | 76.1 (10.8) | |
| Female (SD) | 62.1(18.4) | 57.0 (15.8) | 64.6 (21.4) | |
| Prior Smoking (%) | 9 (50) | 7 (39) | 11 (58) | 3/4/3 |
| Previous fracture documented (%) | 3 (15) | 5 (23) | 6 (27) | 1/0/0 |
| Prior vitamin D use (%) | 4 (20) | 1 (4.5) | 4 (18) | 1/0/0 |
| Prior calcium use (%) | 5 (25) | 2 (9) | 4 (18) | 1/0/0 |
| Number of medications at admission (SD) | 6.2 (4.6) | 6.0 (3.8) | 5.0 (4.4) | 1/0/0 |
| Charlson index (SD) | 1.30 (1.13) | 0.82 (1.18) | 0.55 (0.80) | 2/0/0 |
| Ambulatory without aids prior to admission (%) | 8 (44) | 13 (72) | 13 (68) | 3/4/3 |
| Total calcium, mmol/L (SD) | 2.10 (0.14) | 2.12 (0.11) | 2.08 (0.14) | 1/1/0 |
| Hb, g/L (SD) | 108.6 (15.2) | 102.2 (14.3) | 107.9 (17.4) | 1/0/0 |
| Albumin, g/L (SD) | 34.1 (6.0) | 33.0 (5.8) | 32.4 (5.4) | 1/5/4 |
| Creatinine, umol/L (SD) | 73.7 (37.0) | 70.5 (23.8) | 77.4 (26.1) | 1/0/0 |
| Phosphate, mmol/L (SD) | 0.94 (0.27) | 0.86 (0.22) | 0.97 (0.24) | 1/0/0 |
| Alkaline phosphatase, U/L (SD) | 98.6 (37.8) | 78.7 (26.2) | 79.4 (51.1) | 1/0/0 |
| Parathyroid Hormone (PTH), pmol/L (SD) | 4.20 (2.12) | 5.35 (3.01) | 5.10 (3.91) | 1/0/0 |
*Significant difference between groups, p <0.05.
†Refers to loading dose of vitamin D2 at baseline; all groups received 1,000 IU vitamin D3 /daily following loading dose.
Values are the mean (SD), or number (%)
Figure 2Distribution of serum 25-OHD values by treatment group at Week 4 and 3 months.
Mean (95% CI) 25-OHD and percent reaching 75 nmol/L (N = 65)
| Placebo | 50,000 | 100,000 | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean 25-OHD, unadjusted | ||||
| serum collection at -3 to 0 days, n = 34 | 58.7 (43.4-74.0) | 52.3 (37.4-67.2) | 44.3 (30.8-57.8) | 0.39 |
| serum collection at days 1-3, n = 25 | 41.6 (29.3-53.9) | 59.0 (28.4-89.6) | 76.0 (49.1-102.8) | 0.03† |
| Mean 25-OHD, adjusted for time to measure, n = 59‡ | 46.7 (34.8-58.6) | 53.5 (42.3-64.8) | 58.4 (47.3-69.5) | 0.37 |
| Mean 25-OHD, unadjusted | 69.8 (59.8-79.8) | 84.1 (69.3-98.9) | 75.6 (67.6-83.6) | 0.17 |
| Mean 25-OHD, adjusted for time to measure* | 69.3 (58.4-80.2) | 84.5 (73.7-95.3) | 75.6 (64.5-86.8) | 0.15 |
| Proportion ≥ 75 nmol/L | 47.1% | 58.8% | 50.0% | 0.76 |
| Unadjusted | 85.0 (73.6-93.3) | 85.2 (74.5-95.9) | 74.3 (66.1-82.5) | 0.17 |
| Mean 25-OHD, adjusted for time to measure** | 86.7 (77.6-95.9) | 84.2 (73.6-94.9) | 73.3 (64.5-82.1) | 0.09 |
| Proportion ≥ 75 nmol/L | 76.5% | 75% | 44.4% | 0.09 |
Baseline data (n = 59) was missing for two participants, and four outliers with 25-OHD taken at 6, 10 or 12 days were not included. 4-week data (n = 50) was missing for 13 participants, and two outliers with 25-OHD taken at <13 days were not included. 3-month data (n = 47) was missing for 18 participants. †Significant difference between 100,000 and placebo (post-hoc). ‡Mean time between bolus vitamin D dose and baseline 25-OHD measure was 0.36 days. *Mean time between bolus vitamin D dose and 25-OHD at second measure was 28.1 days. **Mean time between bolus vitamin D dose and 25-OHD at third measure was 98.9 days.