Departments of Pediatrics and of Social and Preventive Medicine, Centre hospitalier universitaire (CHU) Sainte-Justine, University of Montreal, Montreal, Québec, Canada
Microbiology and Infectious Disease, Centre Universitaire de santé de Montréal (CHUM), University of Montreal, Montreal, Québec, Canada.
BMJ Open. 2023 May 25;13(5):e064058. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-064058.
In the COVID-19 pandemic, healthcare workers (HCWs) were at high risk of infection due to their exposure to COVID infections. HCWs were the backbone of our healthcare response to this pandemic; every HCW withdrawn or lost due to infection had a substantial impact on our capacity to deliver care. Primary prevention was a key approach to reduce infection. Vitamin D insufficiency is highly prevalent in Canadians and worldwide. Vitamin D supplementation has been shown to significantly decrease the risk of respiratory infections. Whether this risk reduction would apply to COVID-19 infections remained to be determined. This study aimed to determine the impact of high-dose vitamin D supplementation on incidence of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 infection rate and severity in HCWs working in high COVID incidence areas.
PROTECT was a triple-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group multicentre trial of vitamin D supplementation in HCWs. Participants were randomly allocated in a 1:1 ratio in variable block size to intervention (one oral loading dose of 100 000 IU vitamin D+10 000 IU weekly vitamin D) or control (identical placebo loading dose+weekly placebo). The primary outcome was the incidence of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 infection, documented by RT-qPCR on salivary (or nasopharyngeal) specimens obtained for screening or diagnostic purposes, as well as self-obtained salivary specimens and COVID-19 seroconversion at endpoint. Secondary outcomes included disease severity; duration of COVID-19-related symptoms; COVID-19 seroconversion documented at endpoint; duration of work absenteeism; duration of unemployment support; and adverse health events. The trial was terminated prematurely, due to recruitment difficulty.
This study involves human participants and was approved by the Research Ethics Board (REB) of the Centre hospitalier universitaire (CHU) Sainte-Justine serving as central committee for participating institutions (#MP-21-2021-3044). Participants provided written informed consent to participate in the study before taking part. Results are being disseminated to the medical community via national/international conferences and publications in peer-reviewed journals.
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,由于接触 COVID 感染,医护人员(HCWs)面临高感染风险。HCWs 是我们应对这一大流行病的医疗保健的中坚力量;每一位因感染而退出或失去的 HCW 都对我们提供护理的能力产生了重大影响。初级预防是减少感染的关键方法。维生素 D 不足在加拿大和全球范围内都非常普遍。维生素 D 补充剂已被证明可显著降低呼吸道感染的风险。这种风险降低是否适用于 COVID-19 感染仍有待确定。本研究旨在确定高剂量维生素 D 补充剂对在高 COVID 发病率地区工作的 HCWs 中实验室确诊的 COVID-19 感染率和严重程度的影响。
PROTECT 是一项维生素 D 补充剂在 HCWs 中的三盲、安慰剂对照、平行组多中心试验。参与者以可变大小的块随机分配,按 1:1 比例分配到干预组(口服 100000IU 维生素 D 负荷剂量+每周 10000IU 维生素 D)或对照组(相同的安慰剂负荷剂量+每周安慰剂)。主要结局是通过 RT-qPCR 检测唾液(或鼻咽)标本(用于筛查或诊断目的)以及自我获得的唾液标本和终点时 COVID-19 血清转化来确定的实验室确诊的 COVID-19 感染的发生率。次要结局包括疾病严重程度;COVID-19 相关症状持续时间;终点时记录的 COVID-19 血清转化;工作缺勤时间;失业支持时间;以及不良健康事件。由于招募困难,该试验提前终止。
本研究涉及人类参与者,并获得了作为参与机构中央委员会的 Sainte-Justine 大学医疗中心研究伦理委员会(REB)的批准(#MP-21-2021-3044)。参与者在参与研究之前提供了书面知情同意书。结果将通过全国/国际会议和同行评议期刊上的出版物向医学界传播。