- ICH GCP
- US-Register für klinische Studien
- Klinische Studie NCT07598032
Comparative Analysis of Immunological Responses to Vitamin D Replacement Therapy in Black and West African Men Diagnosed With Prostate Cancer: Elucidating Differential Effects on Immune Function Between Patients With Localized Disease and Those With Metastatic Progression (iCCaRE)
This study is testing whether fixing vitamin D deficiency in Black/West African men with prostate cancer can strengthen their immune system, improve quality of life, and even slow cancer progression compared to those who remain deficient.
Key ideas being tested:
- More than half of Black/West African prostate cancer patients don't have enough vitamin D.
- Low vitamin D weakens immune cell function and affects quality of life, but these problems improve after 8 weeks of vitamin D supplements.
- Immune cell function differs between patients with advanced/recurrent prostate cancer and those with localized disease.
- Patients with advanced disease who show stronger immune responses after vitamin D correction may live longer without their PSA levels rising (a marker of cancer progression).
- Immune cell function in Black/West African patients is different from that in Black/African American patients, and this will be checked by comparing data with a parallel Mayo Clinic study.
Overall goals:
1 . Measure how widespread vitamin D deficiency is in Black/West African prostate cancer patients.
2. Understand how vitamin D levels affect immunity and quality of life. 3. Compare immune function between different groups (localized vs. advanced disease, West African vs. African American patients).
4 . See if vitamin D replacement improves both patient well-being and cancer outcomes.
Study Flow
1. Recruitment & Consent: Patients with prostate cancer (localized or advanced) are invited and give written consent.
2 . Initial Blood Test (10 mL): Check vitamin D and calcium levels. 3. Eligibility: If vitamin D is low (<30 ng/mL), patients join the treatment phase.
4. Baseline Testing (50 mL blood + QOL survey): Immune function measured; quality of life survey completed; virtual doctor consult.
5. Treatment (8 weeks): Daily vitamin D3 pills (2000 IU, free); patients keep a medication diary.
6. Midpoint Check (Week 4): Phone call to check side effects and compliance. 7 .End of Treatment (Week 8): Repeat blood tests (60 mL), second QOL survey, virtual consult.
8. Follow up (up to 3 years). Annual phone calls and medical record review to track progression-free survival.
In short, the study is trying to show that vitamin D deficiency is common in Black/West African prostate cancer patients, that it harms immune function and quality of life, and that correcting it could improve both health and cancer survival.
Studienübersicht
Status
Intervention / Behandlung
Detaillierte Beschreibung
Principal Investigators:
University of Ilorin, Ilorin, Nigeria: Ademola Alabi Popoola, MBBCH; Joshua Abiodun, PhD; Collaborators: Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida, USA: Gerardo Colon-Otero, MD, Trevanne Matthews-Hew, MD, Kim Barbel-Johnson, MD, Sandra Casanova, Keith L. Knutson,n PhD, For research laboratory tests that will be performed at the Mayo Clinic and planned retrospective comparisons with a parallel Mayo Clinic.
This clinical trial, designed to explore the potential role of vitamin D supplementation in improving outcomes among West African men with advanced prostate cancer, is grounded in the following hypothesis.
Clinical Trial Hypotheses Prevalence of Vitamin D Insufficiency More than half of Black/West African prostate cancer patients are expected to have vitamin D insufficiency.
Impact on Immune Function & Quality of Life Vitamin D insufficiency is associated with altered immune cell function and reduced health-related quality of life. Both are expected to improve after 8 weeks of vitamin D replacement.
Disease Stage Differences Immune cell function differs significantly between patients with metastatic/locally recurrent prostate cancer and those with localized disease.
PSA Progression-Free Survival Patients with metastatic or recurrent disease who show an improved immune response after vitamin D correction will have better PSA progression-free survival than those without immune response changes.
Comparisons Across Populations Immune cell function in Black/West African prostate cancer patients differs from that in Black/African American patients. This will be tested by comparing data from this study with a parallel Mayo Clinic study, both partially funded by the U.S. Department of Defense.
Study Aims & Purpose
- Evaluate the prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency among Black/West African prostate cancer patients.
- Assess immune deficits linked to vitamin D insufficiency.
- Compare immune cell function between Black/West African and Black/African American patients (via Mayo Clinic parallel study).
- Examine differences in immune function between localized vs. metastatic/recurrent disease.
- Determine whether vitamin D replacement improves quality of life and PSA progression-free survival (PSA-PFS).
Specific Objectives
- Measure the prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency in Black/West African prostate cancer patients.
- Analyze changes in immune cell function with insufficiency (<30 ng/ml) and after vitamin D replacement.
- Assess the acceptability of vitamin D replacement and its impact on health-related quality of life.
- Compare immune cell function between Black/West African vs. Black/African American patients, and between localized vs. advanced disease.
- Evaluate whether vitamin D replacement improves PSA-PFS in metastatic/recurrent patients who show immune response changes, compared to those without changes and historical controls.
Background Context
- Vitamin D insufficiency (hypovitaminosis D) is linked to increased risks of cardiovascular disease, cancer, infections, and overall mortality.
- Black populations are disproportionately affected due to melanin reducing skin vitamin D synthesis.
- Racial disparities in prostate cancer survival are influenced by socioeconomic, genetic, and health system factors.
- Vitamin D supplementation has been shown to reduce cancer mortality, improve progression-free survival in some cancers, and enhance quality of life.
- Immunological effects: Vitamin D modulates B-cells, T-cells, dendritic cells, and suppresses pro-tumor Th17 T cells, suggesting a role in cancer immunity.
Preliminary Data
- Mayo Clinic pilot study (Duval County, USA): 66% prevalence of hypovitaminosis D in African American participants.
- IRONMAN study (Nigeria): Over 150 men recruited, providing infrastructure for prostate cancer research.
- ICCARE Phase 1 Pilot Project 5: Serum vitamin D levels in 81 Nigerian prostate cancer patients vs. 71 controls showed significantly lower levels in cancer patients, especially advanced cases.
- These findings highlight the high prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency and its potential link to poor prostate cancer outcomes in Black/West African populations.
Study Design & Methods
- Type: Minimal-risk interventional clinical trial.
- Participants: Black/West African men with localized or metastatic/locally recurrent prostate cancer.
- Process:
Pre-screening: Serum vitamin D and calcium testing. Patients with vitamin D <30 ng/ml will be enrolled in the therapeutic arm. Intervention: Oral vitamin D3 (2000 IU daily, free of charge) for 8 weeks. Monitoring: Medication diary, 4-week phone check, baseline, and 8-week blood draws for immune function tests.
Quality of life: CDC HRQOL-4 survey at baseline and 8 weeks. Follow-up: Annual contact up to 3 years for PSA progression-free survival (PSA-PFS).
Study Aims (Detailed)
- Vitamin D Levels: Measure prevalence and mean/median serum 25OHD levels; assess immune regulation after supplementation.
- Immune Profiling: Phenotype immune cell populations (CD4, CD8, B cells, monocytes, dendritic cells, Tregs, NK cells).
- Cancer Antigen Immunity: Measure T-cell and antibody responses to prostate cancer antigens (PAP, PMSA, P53, MUC1).
- General Immunity: Assess responses to viral/bacterial antigens (e.g., tetanus, EBV, CMV).
- Clinical Outcomes: Evaluate PSA-PFS compared to historical controls and stratify by immune response changes after vitamin D replacement.
Target Accrual
- Pre-screening: 200 Nigerian men with localized prostate cancer and 200 with metastatic/locally recurrent disease.
- Intervention: ~100 localized and ~100 advanced cases (due to 60-70% prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency).
- Sample size: Adequate to evaluate effects of vitamin D insufficiency and replacement on immune profiles.
Subject Population
- Adults ≥18 years, Nigerians, with a history of prostate cancer (localized or advanced).
- Intervention group: 200 patients with low vitamin D (<30 ng/ml), treated with oral vitamin D3 (2000 IU daily for 8 weeks).
- Blood samples collected at UITH, Ilorin, Nigeria.
Specimen Handling
- Blood stored at -80°C freezers at the University of Ilorin.
- Shipped to Mayo Clinic Biobank and analyzed at Dr. Keith Knutson's lab (Florida).
- Retrospective comparison planned with Mayo Clinic parallel study (DoD-funded).
Data Analysis Plan
- Regression models controlling for age, BMI, smoking, and vitamin D receptor variants.
- Descriptive analysis of vitamin D supplement use (diagnosis, enrollment, follow-up).
- Frequency of vitamin D testing pre- and post-enrollment; chi-square and t-tests for group comparisons.
- Separate analyses for USA vs. Nigeria cohorts; centralized lab analysis at Mayo Clinic.
Endpoints
- Effects of vitamin D replacement on immune cell function.
- Differences in immune profiles:
- Black/African American vs. Black/West African patients.
- Localized vs. metastatic/recurrent disease.
- Antigen-specific T-cell and antibody responses (baseline vs. 8 weeks).
- Prevalence of vitamin D insufficiency.
- Acceptability of vitamin D replacement therapy.
- PSA progression-free survival (PSA-PFS) outcomes. Safety & Monitoring
- Vitamin D dose (2000 IU daily) is safe and within recommended limits.
- Adverse events monitored via phone calls and physician consults.
- Oversight by Savante Consulting (CRO), site PIs, and NAFDAC compliance.
- Clinical Monitoring Plan ensures GCP adherence and regulatory compliance. Data Storage & Access
- Patient data limited to essentials, stored securely in REDCap®.
- Hard copies locked for 5 years, then shredded.
- De-identified data sent to Mayo Clinic biostatisticians for analysis. Funding
- Supported by U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) (Project ID: PC230672P11).
- Covers investigator salaries, coordinators, lab supplies, pharmacy costs, and specimen processing.
Studientyp
Einschreibung (Geschätzt)
Phase
- Phase 3
Kontakte und Standorte
Studienkontakt
- Name: Ademola A Popoola, MD
- Telefonnummer: 000 +2348032224299
- E-Mail: ademolapopoola@unilorin.edu.ng
Studieren Sie die Kontaktsicherung
- Name: Remi S Solagbade, MD
- Telefonnummer: 000 +2347037779545
- E-Mail: solagbaders@gmail.com
Studienorte
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Kwara State
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Ilorin, Kwara State, Nigeria, 240001
- University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital
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Kontakt:
- Remi S Solagbade, MD
- Telefonnummer: 000 +2347037779545
- E-Mail: solagbaders@gmail.com
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Kontakt:
- Abiodun L Azeez, MD
- Telefonnummer: 000 +2347065870498
- E-Mail: azeezlateefabiodun@yahoo.com
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Unterermittler:
- Hannah O Olawumi, MD
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Unterermittler:
- Ismail Oseni, MD
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Unterermittler:
- Joshua Abiodun, PhD
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Teilnahmekriterien
Zulassungskriterien
Studienberechtigtes Alter
- Erwachsene
- Älterer Erwachsener
Akzeptiert gesunde Freiwillige
Beschreibung
Inclusion Criteria:
- Self-identified Black/West African Males, Age ≥18 years
- Patients with a previous history of localized or metastatic or locally recurrent prostate cancer
- Willing to travel to the University of Ilorin Surgery Outpatient Department (SOPD UITH)for baseline and 8 weeks visit for blood collection, if eligible.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Known hypersensitivity to vitamin D.
- End-stage renal failure on dialysis
- Liver cirrhosis
- Currently taking a vitamin D or multivitamin supplement, which has more than 400 IU/10mcg of vitamin D daily for the past month.
- Legal inability or restricted legal ability, medical or psychological conditions not allowing proper study completion or informed consent signature.
- History of hypercalcemia
Studienplan
Wie ist die Studie aufgebaut?
Designdetails
- Hauptzweck: Behandlung
- Zuteilung: N / A
- Interventionsmodell: Einzelgruppenzuweisung
- Maskierung: Keine (Offenes Etikett)
Waffen und Interventionen
Teilnehmergruppe / Arm |
Intervention / Behandlung |
|---|---|
|
Experimental: Vitamin Deficiency patients who will have Vitamin D Supplements
2000 IU of Vitamin D supplement will be given to the patients with advanced prostate cancer who have Vitamin D levels less than 30 ng/ ml for 8 weeks
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2000 IU of vitamin D will be given to the patients with prostate cancer with Serum low Vitamin D levels ( he Locally advanced Group and the group with metastasis).
|
Was misst die Studie?
Primäre Ergebnismessungen
Ergebnis Maßnahme |
Maßnahmenbeschreibung |
Zeitfenster |
|---|---|---|
|
Proportion of Men with Advanced Prostate Cancer with Vitamin D Deficiency
Zeitfenster: 48 months
|
The proportion of African men with advanced prostate cancer who have low vitamin D levels will be calculated as the number of men with vitamin D deficiency divided by the total number of men diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer.
|
48 months
|
|
Serum levels of Vitamin D in African Men with Advanced Prostate Cancer .
Zeitfenster: The test will be done at the time of recruitment and at 8 weeks after the supplementation
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The serum 25(OH)D levels will be measured using Enzyme Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) (target: 30-50 ng/mL).
|
The test will be done at the time of recruitment and at 8 weeks after the supplementation
|
Sekundäre Ergebnismessungen
Ergebnis Maßnahme |
Maßnahmenbeschreibung |
Zeitfenster |
|---|---|---|
|
Tolerability of eight weeks of Vitamin D supplementation in African men with Advanced Prostate Cancer who have low levels of Vitamin D
Zeitfenster: Tolerability will be monitored during the 8-week supplementation period and for an additional 8 weeks thereafter, covering a total duration of 16 weeks.
|
The participants' tolerance of vitamin D supplementation will be measured by the following: Symptoms of vitamin D intolerance will be documented by looking at the proportion of men with the following symptoms. These include the following: Gastrointestinal (nausea, vomiting, constipation, abdominal pain, and loss of appetite); Neuromuscular (weakness, fatigue, muscle aches, and confusion); bone pain; dehydration; and blood pressure changes. |
Tolerability will be monitored during the 8-week supplementation period and for an additional 8 weeks thereafter, covering a total duration of 16 weeks.
|
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Vitamin D supplementation and PSA levels in advanced prostate cancer.
Zeitfenster: The PSA will be measured every three months for each patient 36 months
|
This study aims to evaluate whether vitamin D supplementation in patients with advanced prostate cancer alters serum prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels, a validated surrogate marker of disease progression.
PSA concentrations are reported in nanograms per milliliter (ng/mL).
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The PSA will be measured every three months for each patient 36 months
|
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Vitamin D supplementation and immune cell activity in advanced prostate cancer.
Zeitfenster: The immune cell counts will be measured at the recruitment after 8 weeks
|
This trial investigates whether vitamin D supplementation influences immune activity.
Immune cell counts are reported in cells per microliter (cells/µL).
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The immune cell counts will be measured at the recruitment after 8 weeks
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Mitarbeiter und Ermittler
Mitarbeiter
Ermittler
- Hauptermittler: Ademola A Popoola, MBBS,MD, FWACS, FMCS, Department of Surgery, University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital / University of Ilorin
- Studienleiter: Remi S Solagbade, MBBS, Department of Surgery , University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital
Publikationen und hilfreiche Links
Allgemeine Veröffentlichungen
- Aranow C. Vitamin D and the immune system. J Investig Med. 2011 Aug;59(6):881-6. doi: 10.2310/JIM.0b013e31821b8755.
- Hoogendijk WJ, Lips P, Dik MG, Deeg DJ, Beekman AT, Penninx BW. Depression is associated with decreased 25-hydroxyvitamin D and increased parathyroid hormone levels in older adults. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2008 May;65(5):508-12. doi: 10.1001/archpsyc.65.5.508.
- Nelson SM, Batai K, Ahaghotu C, Agurs-Collins T, Kittles RA. Association between Serum 25-Hydroxy-Vitamin D and Aggressive Prostate Cancer in African American Men. Nutrients. 2016 Dec 28;9(1):12. doi: 10.3390/nu9010012.
- Song ZY, Yao Q, Zhuo Z, Ma Z, Chen G. Circulating vitamin D level and mortality in prostate cancer patients: a dose-response meta-analysis. Endocr Connect. 2018 Dec 1;7(12):R294-R303. doi: 10.1530/EC-18-0283.
- Andersen MR, Sweet E, Hager S, Gaul M, Dowd F, Standish LJ. Effects of Vitamin D Use on Health-Related Quality of Life of Breast Cancer Patients in Early Survivorship. Integr Cancer Ther. 2019 Jan-Dec;18:1534735418822056. doi: 10.1177/1534735418822056. Epub 2019 Jan 7.
- Grant WB, Peiris AN. Differences in vitamin D status may account for unexplained disparities in cancer survival rates between African and white Americans. Dermatoendocrinol. 2012 Apr 1;4(2):85-94. doi: 10.4161/derm.19667.
- Kanno K, Akutsu T, Ohdaira H, Suzuki Y, Urashima M. Effect of Vitamin D Supplements on Relapse or Death in a p53-Immunoreactive Subgroup With Digestive Tract Cancer: Post Hoc Analysis of the AMATERASU Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Netw Open. 2023 Aug 1;6(8):e2328886. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.28886.
- Zhang Y, Fang F, Tang J, Jia L, Feng Y, Xu P, Faramand A. Association between vitamin D supplementation and mortality: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2019 Aug 12;366:l4673. doi: 10.1136/bmj.l4673.
- Peng X, Vaishnav A, Murillo G, Alimirah F, Torres KE, Mehta RG. Protection against cellular stress by 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 in breast epithelial cells. J Cell Biochem. 2010 Aug 15;110(6):1324-33. doi: 10.1002/jcb.22646.
- Stechschulte SA, Kirsner RS, Federman DG. Vitamin D: bone and beyond, rationale and recommendations for supplementation. Am J Med. 2009 Sep;122(9):793-802. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2009.02.029.
Studienaufzeichnungsdaten
Haupttermine studieren
Studienbeginn (Geschätzt)
Primärer Abschluss (Geschätzt)
Studienabschluss (Geschätzt)
Studienanmeldedaten
Zuerst eingereicht
Zuerst eingereicht, das die QC-Kriterien erfüllt hat
Zuerst gepostet (Tatsächlich)
Studienaufzeichnungsaktualisierungen
Letztes Update gepostet (Tatsächlich)
Letztes eingereichtes Update, das die QC-Kriterien erfüllt
Zuletzt verifiziert
Mehr Informationen
Begriffe im Zusammenhang mit dieser Studie
Schlüsselwörter
Zusätzliche relevante MeSH-Bedingungen
- Urogenitale Erkrankungen
- Genitalerkrankungen
- Genitale Neubildungen, männlich
- Urogenitale Neoplasmen
- Neubildungen nach Standort
- Neubildungen
- Genitalerkrankungen, männlich
- Prostataerkrankungen
- Männliche Urogenitalerkrankungen
- Neubildungen nach histologischem Typ
- Neubildungen, Drüsen und Epithelien
- Karzinom
- Prostataneoplasmen
- Adenokarzinom
Andere Studien-ID-Nummern
- UIlorinTeachingH
- UNI-351872 (Andere Zuschuss-/Finanzierungsnummer: US DoD)
Plan für individuelle Teilnehmerdaten (IPD)
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Beschreibung des IPD-Plans
IPD-Sharing-Zeitrahmen
IPD-Sharing-Zugriffskriterien
Art der unterstützenden IPD-Freigabeinformationen
- STUDIENPROTOKOLL
- SAFT
- ICF
- ANALYTIC_CODE
- CSR
Arzneimittel- und Geräteinformationen, Studienunterlagen
Studiert ein von der US-amerikanischen FDA reguliertes Arzneimittelprodukt
Studiert ein von der US-amerikanischen FDA reguliertes Geräteprodukt
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