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Non-inferiority of low-dose compared to standard high-dose calcium supplementation in pregnancy: study protocol for two randomized, parallel group, non-inferiority trials in India and Tanzania.

Trials
January 1, 1970
Pratibha Dwarkanath et al. (20 authors)
Clinical Trial ProtocolJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to assess whether low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg/day) is non-inferior to standard high-dose supplementation (1500 mg/day) in preventing preeclampsia and preterm birth in pregnant women with low dietary calcium intake.

Results Summary

The study design suggests potential efficacy of low-dose calcium in reducing preeclampsia and preterm birth, but direct comparative results are pending as the trials are ongoing. The abstract highlights the potential benefits of low-dose calcium, such as improved adherence and reduced costs, but definitive outcomes are not yet reported.

Population

Nulliparous pregnant women in Bangalore, India, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, with low dietary calcium intake.

Effective Dosage

500 mg elemental calcium/day (low-dose) vs. 1500 mg elemental calcium/day (high-dose).

Duration

From randomization (before 20 weeks of gestation) until delivery.

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (16)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
high-dose calcium supplementation (1500-2000 mg elemental calcium)
decrease
prevention of preeclampsia
pregnant women in populations with low dietary calcium intake
-
recommends
#1
low-dose calcium supplementation (< 1000 mg elemental calcium/day)
decrease
risk of preeclampsia
pregnant women
-
similar reductions
#2
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
preeclampsia
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#3
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
preterm birth
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#4
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
gestational hypertension
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#5
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
severe features of preeclampsia
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#6
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
pregnancy-related death
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#7
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
third trimester severe anemia
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#8
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
fetal death
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#9
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
stillbirth
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#10
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
low birthweight
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#11
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
small-for-gestational age birth
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#12
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
no change
infant death
nulliparous pregnant women
-
non-inferiority
#13
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
increase
individual-level adherence
pregnant women in populations with low dietary calcium intake
-
may improve
#14
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
decrease
programmatic costs
pregnant women in populations with low dietary calcium intake
-
reduce
#15
low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day)
increase
routine calcium supplementation in pregnancy
pregnant women in populations with low dietary calcium intake
-
expand implementation
#16
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy are important causes of maternal morbidity and mortality, as well as preterm birth, the leading cause of death for children under 5 years globally. The World Health Organization currently recommends that pregnant women receive high-dose calcium supplementation (1500-2000 mg elemental calcium) for prevention of preeclampsia in populations with low dietary calcium intake. Trials of low-dose calcium supplementation (< 1000 mg elemental calcium/day) during pregnancy have also shown similar reductions in the risk of preeclampsia; however, no trials to date have directly compared low-dose to the standard high-dose calcium supplementation. Our objective is to assess the non-inferiority of low-dose as compared to standard high-dose calcium supplementation in pregnancy. METHODS/DESIGN: We will conduct two independent trials in Bangalore, India (n = 11,000 pregnancies), and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania (n = 11,000 pregnancies). The trial designs are individually randomized, parallel group, quadruple-blind, non-inferiority trials of low-dose calcium supplementation (500 mg elemental calcium/day) as compared to standard high-dose calcium supplementation (1500 mg elemental calcium/day) among nulliparous pregnant women. Pregnant women will be enrolled in the trial before 20 weeks of gestation and will receive the randomized calcium regimen from randomization until the time of delivery. The co-primary outcomes are (i) preeclampsia and (ii) preterm birth; we will test non-inferiority of the primary outcomes for low-dose as compared to the standard high-dose supplementation regimen in each trial. The trials' secondary outcomes include gestational hypertension, severe features of preeclampsia, pregnancy-related death, third trimester severe anemia, fetal death, stillbirth, low birthweight, small-for-gestational age birth, and infant death. DISCUSSION: The trials will provide causal evidence on the non-inferiority of low-dose as compared to the standard high-dose supplementation in India and Tanzania. A single tablet, low-dose calcium supplementation regimen may improve individual-level adherence, reduce programmatic costs, and ultimately expand implementation of routine calcium supplementation in pregnancy in populations with low dietary calcium intake. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03350516 ; registered on 22 November 2018. Clinical Trials Registry-India identifier: CTRI/2018/02/012119 ; registered on 23 February 2018. Tanzania Medicines and Medical Devices Authority Trials Registry identifier: TFDA0018/CTR/0010/5 ; registered on 20 December 2018.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
CalciumChildChild, PreschoolDietary SupplementsFemaleHumansHypertension, Pregnancy-InducedIndiaInfantInfant, NewbornPregnancyPremature BirthRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicStillbirthTanzania
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality90/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations6
Citations/Year1.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.66
NIH Percentile35.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.72
Normalized Score0.72
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