W15 - Vitamin D levels in CaD participants with colorectal cancer or fractures

Investigator Names and Contact Information

Introduction/Intent

The primary goal of this project is to determine whether the effect of intake of vitamin D on fractures depends on the effect of calcium and vitamin D on bone turnover markers and polymorphisms related to vitamin D and calcium actions. Taking advantage of the opportunity afforded by the completion of the baseline 25(OH) vitamin D3 approved by the Steering Committee in May 2005, additional analyses can also explore the interaction of baseline 25(OH) vitamin D on the turnover markers. To test the hypotheses that change in vitamin D status contributes to reduction of fractures and to explore a potential threshold effect, we propose to obtain baseline serum and DNA of women in the Calcium and Vitamin D Trial (CaD) of the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) and longitudinal measures obtained from women who had repeated sampling as part of the 6% blood subsample. We propose to measure serum 25-OH vitamin D (year 3-after 2 years CaD randomization in women in the 6% subsample) and markers of bone turnover, bone specific alkaline phosphatase (BSAP), aminoterminal propeptide of type I procollagen (PINP), C-telopeptides of collagen cross-links (CTx), osteoprotegerin (OPG), receptor activator nuclear factor - ĸB ligand (RANKL); and polymorphisms of genes related to vitamin D and calcium actions. Since these bone turnover markers have already been measured in women in Hormone Therapy Trials as part on the fracture biomarker proposal for those CTs, we will require these to be measured for the remainder of the women in the CaD trial who were not in one of the HT trials.

Osteoporosis is a major public health problem in the United States, a disorder that increases with age especially in women. It is characterized by low bone mass and microarchitectural changes that lead to skeletal fragility and fractures. The risk of osteoporotic fractures rises exponentially with age, resulting in 1.5 million cases of fractures annually in the United States; a 50 year-old woman has nearly a 50% risk of an osteoporotic fracture during her lifetime. This disease poses a major economic burden to our society. Nutritional, lifestyle, hormonal, and genetic factors contribute to the risk of fractures.

Osteoporosis results from an imbalance between bone resorption and bone formation. The development of markers of bone turnover such as the serum level of C-telopeptides of collagen cross-links, which is an index of bone resorption, and the concentrations of serum osteocalcin and bone-specific alkaline phosphatase, which are bone formation markers, make it possible to examine bone remodeling noninvasively.

It has previously been described that women with acute hip fractures, some of whom had vitamin D deficiency, had lower serum osteocalcin levels with an increase in urinary N-telopeptide levels in comparison women admitted for elective orthopedic surgery (1) Data show that biochemical markers can predict the risk of fracture in older patients and are elevated in the setting of a fracture. Another formation marker, aminoterminal propeptide of type I procollagen (PINP) guides assembly of the collagen triple helix. This marker has been previously used in other WHI studies. Since PINP has already been measured in some women of the CaD trial, we will study PINP and BSAP as formation makers and serum CTx as a resorption marker for purposes of this study. Recent data indicate that the OPG/RANKL/RANK signaling pathway is the principal regulator of osteoclastogenesis. The binding of the osteoblast lineage cell surface protein, RANKL, to RANK, a receptor present on mature osteoclasts and precursors, stimulates osteoclast differentiation and activates bone resorption. OPG is secreted by osteoblasts and inhibits osteoclastogenesis by binding to RANKL, blocking its activity, although the significance of circulating versus locally generated OPG levels is not known. Because an increase in RANKL levels leads to bone resorption, an action blocked by OPG, we propose to measure circulating levels of OPG and soluble RANKL (regulators of osteoclastogenesis).

Osteoporosis is a multifactorial disease characterized by decrease in bone mass and loss of microarchitechtural structure of bone leading to increased risk of fractures. Though lifestyle, diet, physical activity etc. play an important role as risk factors for the development of the disease, a genetic component is also known to be a strong risk factor contributing to higher susceptibility of the disease. Several polymorphisms are known to be implicated in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis and hence fragility fractures. We plan to study polymorphisms related to vitamin D metabolism and the calcium sensing receptor

There have been contradictory results showing association between polymorphisms of the vitamin-D-receptor (VDR) and bone mineral density BMD) in pre and postmenopausal women (2). A German study examined the association of bone density, fracture predictively and biochemical markers of bone turnover with VDR polymorphism. They reported that bone density at the axial skeleton is associated with the VDR allele polymorphism and that there is an influence on bone turn over and fracture rate in the German population (3). Contrary to these results, another study conducted among postmenopausal women reported that VDR genotypes do not predict bone turnover or rate of postmenopausal bone loss. Hence, they concluded that determination of VDR genotypes might not be a useful clinical test for the risk of osteoporosis (4). Similarly, there have been conflicting reports on the calcium sensing receptor (CASR) gene polymorphism and BMD and fractures. A Japanese study investigated the association between the CA-repeat polymorphism at the human CASR gene locus and BMD of radial bone in postmenopausal women. Women who had an A3 allele (228 bp, containing 18 repeats of CA) had significantly lower adjusted BMD than participants who did not carry this allele, thus suggesting that genetic variation at the CASR gene locus is associated with determinants of BMD in postmenopausal women (7). However, another polymorphism of the CASR gene, A986S has been studied by researchers and has failed to predict serum calcium level, BMD, or fracture rate in elderly women (5). A study conducted in Italian postmenopausal women also reported that A986S CASR polymorphism does not have a role in BMD and prevalence of fragility fractures (6). In the proposed studies we will determine whether these and other polymorphisms related to vitamin D and calcium sensing are associated with increased risk of fractures

Materials/Methods

We will compare the baseline measurements of serum 25-OH vitamin D (obtained from the SC-approved 25OH) biomarker CCA) and biomarkers of bone turnover in women with and without fractures. BSAP, PINP, C-Tx, and OPG will serve as primary bone turnover markers. We will study RANKL as a secondary outcome measure due to conflicting results with the assay. This hypothesis will be tested in a randomly selected subset of 800 women (400 women with fractures and 400 controls). We will use the radioimmunoassay (RIA) (Diasorin) to measure the 25 hydroxy vitamin D levels in 50µL of serum sample. Serum BSAP (Ostase immunoradiometric assay, Beckman Coulter, CA) will be measured in 0.2ml serum. The interassay and intra-assay coefficients of variation (CV%) for the assay ranged from 2.3% to 12.1% as previously determined. PINP (Diasorin, Stillwater, NM) will be measured in 50µL serum. RANKL and OPG will be measured in 100μl (0.1ml) by enzyme immunoassay (enzyme immunoassay, ALPCO, Windham, NH). The CVs have been reported to be less than 8% for sRANKL and 6% for OPG previously.

As a secondary end point, we will study the association between change in 25-OH D levels from baseline to follow-up at 3 years (AV3) in a 6% sub-sample and risk of fracture. We will include 197 cases of total fractures for this analysis. However, due to lack of power we will not study the association by fracture type.

Results/Findings

See publications: 450, 451, 581, 876, 878, 910, 1121. WHI publications by study lists published WHI papers that have been generated by ancillary studies. A complete list of WHI papers is available in the Papers of this website.

References

  1. LeBoff MS, Kohlmeier L, Hurwitz S, Franklin J, Wright J, Glowacki J. Occult vitamin D deficiency in postmenopausal US women with acute hip fracture. JAMA 1999; 281(16):1505-1511.
  2. Massart F, Reginster JY, Brandi ML. Genetics of menopause associated diseases. Maturitas 40 (2001) 103-116(The European Menopause Journal).
  3. Baltzer AW, Reinecke J, Wehling P, Granrath M, Schulitz KP.Bone density and Bone metabolism regulated by vitamin D receptor allele polymorphism in a German study sample. Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgeb. 1999 May-Jun; 137 (3):273-9
  4. Garnero P, Borel O, Sornay-Rendu E, Arlot ME, Delmas PD. Vitamin D receptor gene polymorphisms are not related to bone turnover, rate of bone loss, and bone mass in postmenopausal women: the OFELY Study. J Bone Mineral Res. 1996 Jun;11 (6): 827-34
  5. Bollerslev J, Wilson SG, Dick IM, Devine A, Dhaliwal SS, Prince RL. Calcium-Sensing Receptor gene Polymorphism A986S does not predict Serum calcium levels, Bone mineral Density, in a large Cohort of Elderly Women. Calcif Tissue Int (2004) 74;12-17.
  6. Cetani F, Pardi E, Borsari S, Vignali E, Dipollina G, Braga V, Adami S, Pinchera A, Marcocci C. calcium sensing receptor gene polymorphism is not associated with bone mineral density in Italian postmenopausal women. European Journal of Endocrinology, Vol 148, Issue 6, 603-607.
  7. Tsukamoto K, Orimo H, Hosoi T, Miyao M, Ota N, Nakajima T, Yoshida H, Watanabe S, Suzuki T, Emi M. Association of bone mineral density with polymorphism of the human calcium-sensing receptor locus. Calcif Tissue Int. 2000 Mar;66(3):181-3.
  8. Walters MR. Newly identified actions of the vitamin D endocrine system. Endocr Rev. 1992 Nov;13(4):719-64. Review.

Data Dictionaries and Study Documentation

This section displays all study-related data dictionaries and study-related files. The investigators for this study will upload the datasets, data dictionaries, and other study-related files. Study-related files will be made available to the public one year after the completion of the ancillary study, with the exception of the datasets, which will only be available to those with a Data Distribution Agreement. Those will be available to those with permission to download and will appear as a download link next to the data dictionary

Data Dictionaries

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Description
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Study Documents

Related Papers

Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation and the risk for fractures

Rebecca Jackson et al., 2006/2 PubMed #16481635 MSID: 450
The efficacy of calcium with vitamin D supplementation for preventing hip and other fractures in healthy postmenopausal women remains equivocal.We recruited 36,282 postmenopausal women, 50 to 79 years of age, who were already enrolled in a Women's Health Initiative (WHI) clinical trial. We randomly assigned participants to receive 1000 mg of elemental [corrected] calcium as calcium carbonate with 400 IU of vitamin D3 daily or placebo. Fractures were ascertained for an average follow-up period of...
Keywords: Calcium; Vitamin D; Fractures
Related Studies: W15

Calcium plus vitamin D supplementation and the risk of colorectal cancer

Jean Wactawski-Wende et al., 2006/2 PubMed #16481636 MSID: 451
Higher intake of calcium and vitamin D has been associated with a reduced risk of colorectal cancer in epidemiologic studies and polyp recurrence in polyp-prevention trials. However, randomized-trial evidence that calcium with vitamin D supplementation is beneficial in the primary prevention of colorectal cancer is lacking.We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial involving 36,282 postmenopausal women from 40 Women's Health Initiative centers: 18,176 women received 500 mg...
Keywords: Calcium; Vitamin D; Colorectal Cancer
Related Studies: W15

Prospective association of vitamin D concentrations with mortality in postmenopausal women: results from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI)

Charles Eaton et al., 2011/10 PubMed #22030222 MSID: 878
Prospective epidemiologic data on the association between vitamin D and all-cause and cause-specific mortality are limited.This study aimed to determine whether 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations were prospectively and independently associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD), cancer, and all-cause mortality in postmenopausal women.A substudy in 2429 postmenopausal women within the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) with measured baseline 25(OH)D concentrations were followed for 10 y for...
Keywords: Vitamin D; 25(Oh)Vitamin D; All-Cause Mortality; Frailty
Related Studies: 181, W15, W24

Lack of association between 25(OH)D levels and incident type 2 diabetes in older women

Jennifer Robinson et al., 2011/2 PubMed #21289227 MSID: 910
To examine whether lower serum levels of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin (OH) D [25(OH)D] are associated with increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes.A post hoc analysis of three nested case-control studies of fractures, colon cancer, and breast cancer that measured serum 25(OH)D levels in women participating in the Women's Health Initiative (WHI) Clinical Trials and Observational Study who were free of prevalent diabetes at baseline. Diabetes was defined as self-report of physician diagnosis or re...
Keywords: Vitamin D; 25(Oh)Vitamin D; Diabetes
Related Studies: 181, W15, W24

A prospective study of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels, blood pressure, and incident hypertension in postmenopausal women

Karen Margolis et al., 2011/11 PubMed #22127681 MSID: 876
In randomized trials, the effect of vitamin D supplementation on blood pressure has been equivocal, while most prospective cohort studies have shown that the risk of incident hypertension is lower in people with higher levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25(OH)D). The authors examined the association between levels of 25(OH)D and changes in blood pressure and incident hypertension in 4,863 postmenopausal women recruited into the Women's Health Initiative between 1993 and 1998. Over 7 years, there wer...
Keywords: Vitamin D; 25(Oh)Vitamin D; Blood Pressure; Hypertension
Related Studies: W15, W24

Predictors of serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D concentrations among postmenopausal women: the Women's Health Initiative Calcium plus Vitamin D Clinical Trial

Amy Millen et al., 2010/3 PubMed #20219959 MSID: 581
It is unclear how well surrogate markers for vitamin D exposure (eg, oral intake of vitamin D and estimates of sunlight exposure), with and without consideration of other potential predictors of 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentrations, similarly rank individuals with respect to 25(OH)D blood concentrations.The objective was to determine how much variation in serum 25(OH)D concentrations (nmol/L) could be explained by a predictive model with the use of different vitamin D surrogate markers (...
Keywords: Vitamin D; Serum; Diet; Food Frequency Questionnaire; Sunlight; Solar Irradiance; Langleys; Watts
Related Studies: W15

Calcium and vitamin D supplementation and cognitive impairment in the Women's Health Initiative

Rebecca Rossom et al., 2012/11 PubMed #23176129 MSID: 1121
Impairments in physical performance increase sharply with age. Low serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) levels may be a modifiable risk factor for physical performance decline.Five hundred thirty-two participants in the Women's Health Initiative Clinical Trial (WHI CT) were among a 25% randomly selected subsample of women who participated in performance-based measures of physical performance at baseline, year 1, year 3, and year 6. A physical performance summary score was derived from three tests:...
Related Studies: 39, 103, W15, W24

Efficacy of vitamin D3 supplementation on cancer mortality: Systematic review and individual patient data meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials

Ben Schöttker et al., 2023/3 PubMed #37004841 MSID: 4322
To evaluate the effect of vitamin D3 supplementation on cancer mortality in the general population and on prognosis in cancer patients, a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised, placebo-controlled trials (RCTs) and individual patient data (IPD) was conducted. Overall, 14 RCTs with a total of 104,727 participants (2015 cancer deaths) were identified and 7 RCTs, including 90 % of all study participants (n = 94,068), could be included in the IPD meta-analyses. The main meta-analysis of t...
Keywords: Vitamin D; Cancer; Mortality; Systematic Review; Meta-Analysis
Related Studies: W4, W15, W22, W24