Effect of Vitamin C Supplementation in Patients With Primary Hypothyroidism
NCT ID: NCT05733078
Last Updated: 2024-01-11
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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RECRUITING
PHASE2
40 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-11-01
2024-06-30
Brief Summary
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Levothyroxine is a synthetic hormone with structure similar to naturally occurring thyroxine, and it is used as replacement monotherapy of hypothyroidism. It is mainly absorbed via small intestine. The optimal daily levothyroxine dosage requirement is 1.6 microgram/kg body weight/day, which can normalize TSH in most patients, however many studies indicate that nearly half the patient on replacement therapy may not attain a normal TSH and require further doses, possibly due to interference or malabsorption. Multiple dose change and repeated diagnostic procedures in these patients can not only increased health costs but increased of ensuing complications secondary to sub-optimally controlled hypothyroidism. Instead of increasing levothyroxine doses and getting variable response, recent study have shown improvement in thyroid function by adding on vitamin C alongside levothyroxine dose, albeit only in a specific subset of patient having gastritis. The effect of Vitamin C on improving levothyroxine also been shown to be effective over a short period in a non-randomized, non-controlled setting. Our study aims to investigate whether addition of vitamin C to levothyroxine can improve the biochemical and clinical thyroid status in a randomized controlled setting.
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Detailed Description
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OBJECTIVE:
To measure the biochemical and clinical responses in thyroid status with additional oral vitamin C in patients with features of hypothyroidism who are already on recommended daily dose of \>1.6 ug/kg/day of oral levothyroxine.
METHODOLOGY:
STUDY DESIGN:
This is a prospective randomized controlled study in which all adult patients known to have primary hypothyroidism, attending Tawam Hospital Endocrine clinic for the last 6 months, and fulfilling the criteria below, will be selected. We will aim to include minimum 32 patients. The study power calculations for population of Al Ain estimated 650,000 with an estimated global prevalence of hypothyroidism being around 6% and expected 20-50% (taken as 33%) with suboptimal thyroid function, indicates need for minimum 31 patient with confidence interval of 95% and margin of error as 5%. The patients will be randomized to either control or intervention group (16 in each group).
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
The patient will be randomized into control(placebo) and test (Vit C tablet) groups using the randomization code. The patients in treatment group will be provided vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks. In the control group the patients will be given oral rehydration effervescent tablet as placebo with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks.
The patient in test group will be provided vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks. The patients who wish to continue at the end of 12 weeks will be provided another 12 weeks supply of vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for with thyroid function tests and clinical score assessed at the end of week 24.
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Control / Crossover
The patients in control group will have a oral rehydration effervescent tablet to take with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks.
Crossover: After first 12 weeks, the control group will then be provided vitamin C (intervention) effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks to see if there is any difference on biochemical testing or clinical scores.
Oral Rehydration Salt Formulations
The patients in control group will have a oral rehydration effervescent tablet to take with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks. The control group will then be provided vitamin C (intervention) effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks to see if there is any difference on biochemical testing or clinical scores.
Intervention
The patient in test group will be provided vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks. The patients who wish to continue at the end of 12 weeks will be provided another 12 weeks supply of vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for with thyroid function tests and clinical score assessed at the end of week 24.
Vitamin C
The patient in test group will be provided vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks. The patients who wish to continue at the end of 12 weeks will be provided another 12 weeks supply of vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for with thyroid function tests and clinical score assessed at the end of week 24.
Interventions
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Vitamin C
The patient in test group will be provided vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks. The patients who wish to continue at the end of 12 weeks will be provided another 12 weeks supply of vitamin C effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for with thyroid function tests and clinical score assessed at the end of week 24.
Oral Rehydration Salt Formulations
The patients in control group will have a oral rehydration effervescent tablet to take with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks. The control group will then be provided vitamin C (intervention) effervescent tablets to use 1 gram daily with their usual dose of Levothyroxine for 12 weeks, with thyroid function tests assessed at 6 and 12 weeks to see if there is any difference on biochemical testing or clinical scores.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Diagnosed to have Primary hypothyroidism \> 6 months.
* Under follow up in Endocrine clinic in Tawam hospital during the 6 months
* No evidence of secondary hypothyroidism (no pituitary problems/surgery or thyroid surgery/ablation)
* TSH \> 4 despite being on \> 1.6 ug/kg/day of Levothyroxine for more than 8 weeks
Exclusion Criteria
* Presence of selenium or iodine deficiency
* Gastric/intestinal resection surgery or confirmed malabsorption syndromes
* Known mental health issues affecting compliance
* Patient unable to consent.
* Overt biochemical hypothyroidism with TSH \> 20 or T4 \< 6
18 Years
99 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Dr Adnan Agha
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Dr Adnan Agha
Assistant Professor, Internal Medicine, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, United Arab Emirates University
Principal Investigators
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Adnan Agha
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
United Arab Emirates University
Locations
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Internal Medicine, College of Medicine and Health Sciences
Al Ain City, Abu Dhabi Emirate, United Arab Emirates
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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de Benoist B, McLean E, Andersson M, Rogers L. Iodine deficiency in 2007: global progress since 2003. Food Nutr Bull. 2008 Sep;29(3):195-202. doi: 10.1177/156482650802900305.
Jubiz W, Ramirez M. Effect of vitamin C on the absorption of levothyroxine in patients with hypothyroidism and gastritis. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2014 Jun;99(6):E1031-4. doi: 10.1210/jc.2013-4360. Epub 2014 Mar 6.
Virili C, Antonelli A, Santaguida MG, Benvenga S, Centanni M. Gastrointestinal Malabsorption of Thyroxine. Endocr Rev. 2019 Feb 1;40(1):118-136. doi: 10.1210/er.2018-00168.
Other Identifiers
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UAEU_CMHS_IM_DOH_2023/56
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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