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Vitamin C: Assessing Safety After Lung Transplant
This study is being done to determine if parenterally administered ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) given at the time of lung transplant is safe. Vitamin C may be an effective intervention towards primary graft dysfunction (PGD). The study will enroll 69 participants who consent to the intervention. Participants who do not consent to the intervention will be treated according to standard-of-care, but may choose to be consented to have their data retrospectively reviewed. Based on our consent rate, this group may include 40-70 participants. Participants will be on study for up to 12 months.
PGD is a frequent and severe outcome that impacts both short- and long-term outcomes after lung transplantation. Major pathophysiologic contributors include ischemia and reperfusion injury, mitochondrial dysfunction and endothelial failure. No directed therapy exists. Vitamin C is a first-line antioxidant that also acts at the endothelium and mitochondria to decrease permeability and leak, inhibit mitochondrial dysfunction and improve ischemia and reperfusion. When combined with steroids, part of standard care for lung transplant recipients, these effects may be enhanced and synergistically inhibit instigators of patient injury. A pilot trial will ensure safety of this potential intervention and guide future research into this important outcome measure. It will be readily received in the literature. For the present study, vitamin C will be administered parenterally at a dose of 1,500 mg every 6 hours, a dose that is widely accepted and used in other clinical contexts where the drug is studied, such as sepsis. This will predictably reconstitute levels and achieve supratherapeutic benefit towards oxidant scavenging, while avoiding the potential pro-oxidant effects seen at exceedingly high doses. To this end, the investigators will exclude patients where the standard dosing of vitamin C will exceed 100 mg/kg/day (excluding patients \<60 kg). Dosing will continue through post-operative day (POD) 3 to effectively assess for the impact of vitamin C on PGD. Primary Objectives * To assess whether parenterally administered ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is safe in the lung transplant population * To estimate adherence to ascorbic acid administration protocol in this study population and to identify obstacles to feasibility of future trials using this protocol Secondary Objectives * To assess whether parenterally administered ascorbic acid (vitamin C) may decrease the rate and severity of PGD after lung transplant * To establish the incidence of vitamin C and vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiencies in the lung transplant population, and the responsiveness of vitamin C levels to our selected parenteral therapy * To identify interventions that will optimize the post-operative wellbeing of patients receiving lung transplants by decreasing primary graft dysfunction (short and intermediate-to-long term Stop Criteria * Anuria x 3-hours * Moderate, Grade 2 AKI (doubling of baseline creatinine) * An acute, unexplained hemoglobin drop of \>2 mg/dL
Age
18 - 80 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Start Date
April 1, 2023
Primary Completion Date
December 1, 2023
Completion Date
December 1, 2023
Last Updated
May 1, 2023
Vitamin C
DRUG
Lead Sponsor
University of Wisconsin, Madison
NCT00552357
NCT05916495
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT05950724