Mistry Nerges, Hemler Elena C, Dholakia Yatin, Bromage Sabri, Shukla Anupam, Dev Prachi, Govekar Laxmi, Tipre Pranita, Shah Daksha, Keshavjee Salmaan A, Fawzi Wafaie W
Department of Tuberculosis Research, Foundation for Medical Research, Mumbai, India.
Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BMJ Open. 2020 Nov 12;10(11):e039935. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-039935.
Vitamin D status may be an important determinant of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) infection, progression to disease and treatment outcomes. Novel and potentially cost-effective therapies such as vitamin D supplementation are needed to stem the tide of TB and MDR-TB globally, particularly in India, a country that accounts for the largest fraction of the world's TB incidence and MDR-TB incidence, and where vitamin D deficiency is endemic. While vitamin D has shown some promise in the treatment of MDR-TB, its role in the context of MDR-TB infection and progression to disease is largely unknown.
Through a case-control study in Mumbai, India, we aim to examine associations between vitamin D status and active MDR-TB and to investigate vitamin D status and TB infection among controls. Cases are adult outpatient pulmonary patients with MDR-TB recruited from two public TB clinics. Controls are recruited from the cases' household contacts and from non-respiratory departments of the facilities where cases were recruited. Cases and controls are assessed for serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentration, nutrient intake, diet quality, anthropometry and other relevant clinical and sociodemographic parameters. Controls undergo additional clinical assessments to rule out active TB and laboratory assessments to determine presence of TB infection. Statistical analysis investigates associations between vitamin D status and active MDR-TB and between vitamin D status and TB infection among controls, accounting for potential confounding effects of diet, anthropometry and other covariates.
This study has been approved by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Institutional Review Board; Foundation for Medical Research Institutional Research Ethics Committee and Health Ministry's Screening Committee of the Indian Council for Medical Research. Permission was granted by the Municipal Corporation of Greater Mumbai, India, a collaborating partner on this research. Outcomes will be disseminated through publication and scientific presentation.
NCT04342598.
维生素D水平可能是耐多药结核病(MDR-TB)感染、疾病进展及治疗结果的重要决定因素。需要新的且可能具有成本效益的疗法,如补充维生素D,来遏制全球结核病和耐多药结核病的流行趋势,尤其是在印度,该国的结核病发病率和耐多药结核病发病率在全球占比最大,且维生素D缺乏情况普遍存在。虽然维生素D在耐多药结核病治疗中已显示出一些前景,但其在耐多药结核病感染及疾病进展方面的作用在很大程度上仍不清楚。
通过在印度孟买进行的一项病例对照研究,我们旨在研究维生素D水平与活动性耐多药结核病之间的关联,并调查对照组中的维生素D水平及结核感染情况。病例为从两家公立结核病诊所招募的成年门诊肺部耐多药结核病患者。对照组从病例的家庭接触者以及招募病例的机构的非呼吸科部门中选取。对病例和对照组进行血清25-羟基维生素D浓度、营养摄入、饮食质量、人体测量及其他相关临床和社会人口统计学参数的评估。对照组需接受额外的临床评估以排除活动性结核病,并进行实验室评估以确定是否存在结核感染。统计分析将研究维生素D水平与活动性耐多药结核病之间以及对照组中维生素D水平与结核感染之间的关联,同时考虑饮食、人体测量及其他协变量的潜在混杂效应。
本研究已获得哈佛陈曾熙公共卫生学院机构审查委员会、医学研究基金会机构研究伦理委员会以及印度医学研究理事会卫生部筛查委员会的批准。印度大孟买市政公司作为本研究的合作方已给予许可。研究结果将通过发表和科学报告进行传播。
NCT04342598。