Assessing Bone Calcium Content in Children With Kidney Disease Treated With Two Different Medicines
NCT ID: NCT04120922
Last Updated: 2021-08-12
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
21 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2020-01-07
2022-04-30
Brief Summary
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This short-term trial will provide proof-of-concept data to determine the utility of the Ca isotope fractionation technique in guiding medication usage in children with CKD and on dialysis. These data will inform a potential future randomised trial that utilises the calcium isotope fractionation technique to adjust the calcium intake (through diet and different medications, including vitamin D analogues) and monitor changes in important patient level outcomes such as fractures and bone mineral density on DXA scan.
Participants will be administered sevelamer carbonate first for 16 weeks and then will switch to calcium carbonate for 12 weeks. Participants may need to change medication earlier than 16 weeks at the clinician's discretion based on their calcium levels on routine blood tests.
Calcium isotope levels will be measured in blood and urine samples for up to 28 weeks. Isotopes levels in faeces and dialysis fluid samples may also be measured.
This is not a Clinical Trial of an Investigational Medicinal Product (CTIMP).
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Detailed Description
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The growing bones of children need calcium in order to mineralise (become strong). Children with kidney failure (called chronic kidney disease; CKD) or on dialysis can often be calcium deficient. They are given medications with extra calcium to help their bones mineralise. However, there is currently no practical way of measuring bone mineralisation. Doctors may perform special x-rays, but it takes many months before any bone structure problems become apparent on X-rays. Doctors giving children additional calcium do not know how much to give. Sometimes children are given too little and their bones do not mineralise adequately, or they are given too much, and the excess calcium is deposited in their arteries causing vascular calcification. Timely and practical ways of measuring bone mineralisation are needed so doctors can accurately determine the amount of calcium containing medicines they give.
The CAL-BAL trial will evaluate a novel potential biomarker of bone mineralisation: the calcium isotope ratio (δ44/42Ca) which will be measured in blood and urine. The trial will collect information on δ44/42Ca for patients with CKD or on dialysis for 28 weeks. It will measure how δ44/42Ca changes when a patient switches from a medicine containing calcium to one not containing calcium. It will also evaluate the association between δ44/42Ca and established biomarkers of bone formation and repair.
The data collected in CALBAL will not by itself allow doctors to decide whether δ44/42Ca is good biomarker of bone mineralisation. However, it will provide additional biological and clinical information that will further clarify its usefulness as biomarker for further research. Together with information from previous studies done by the Chief Investigator which measured the typical δ44/42Ca of healthy children and children with CKD and on dialysis, the data collected in CAL-BAL may inform the design of a future randomised trial of standard-of-care compared to an approach where δ44/42Ca results are used to prescribe the amount of medicine containing calcium children with CKD or on dialysis are given.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NON_RANDOMIZED
SINGLE_GROUP
BASIC_SCIENCE
NONE
Study Groups
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calcium carbonate
Calcium based P-binder - calcium carbonate: Typical dose is 500mg, orally, three times a day but this can be adjusted as per individual patient requirements at the clinician's discretion.
All participants will be given sevelamer carbonate (Ca-free P-binder) for up to 16 weeks and then calcium carbonate (Ca-based P-binder) for 12 weeks, administered orally. No wash out period is possible as the children must always be on a P-binder. The Ca-free P-binder may be administered for less than 16 weeks if it is clinically necessary to resume the Ca-based P-binder early based on serial monitoring of serum Ca levels.
calcium carbonate
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sevelamer carbonate
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sevelamer carbonate
Calcium (Ca) free P-binder - sevelamer carbonate: Typical dose is 800mg, orally, three times a day but this can be adjusted as per individual patient requirements at the clinician's discretion.
All participants will be given sevelamer carbonate (Ca-free P-binder) for up to 16 weeks and then calcium carbonate (Ca-based P-binder) for 12 weeks, administered orally. No wash out period is possible as the children must always be on a P-binder. The Ca-free P-binder may be administered for less than 16 weeks if it is clinically necessary to resume the Ca-based P-binder early based on serial monitoring of serum Ca levels.
calcium carbonate
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sevelamer carbonate
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Interventions
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calcium carbonate
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sevelamer carbonate
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Must be in stable Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) stage 3b-5 (as per the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes classification) or on dialysis for at least 1 month
3. Hyperphosphataemia defined as a serum P above the age-specific normal level as per the Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative (KDOQI) guideline, or high or normal P levels in a patient already on a P-binder in the preceding 4 weeks
4. On a stable Ca and P diet as assessed by a dietitian and willing to avoid intentional changes in their dairy intake during the trial period
5. Able to give fully informed consent/ assent as applicable.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Glucocorticoid therapy in the preceding year, or a lifetime cumulative steroid exposure ≥6 months
3. Bisphosphonate therapy at any time in the past
4. On cinacalcet in the preceding 6-months
5. Any acute illness in the preceding 2 weeks (when the child was unable to maintain their usual diet or had bed-rest)
6. Living-donor renal transplant planned ≤6 months
7. At screening the albumin-corrected serum calcium cannot be \<2.0mMol/L or \>2.8mMol/L
8. Already participating in any interventional clinical trial or last trial completed less than 4 weeks previously
9. Previously documented poor compliance with medications
10. Any other contraindication to usual prescription of calcium carbonate or sevelamer carbonate
11. Any other reason in the opinion of the Investigator that the participant may not be suitable
12. Estimated GFR (eGFR) more than 45ml/min/1.73m2
13. Pregnant or lactating
14. Currently on sevelamer (includes sevelamer carbonate or sevelamer hydrochloride)
5 Years
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University College, London
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Rukshana Shroff, MD FRCPCH PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust
Locations
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Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children
London, , United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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CDF-2016-09-038
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
CTU/2014/146
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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