Randomised controlled trial of perinatal vitamin D supplementation to prevent early-onset acute respiratory infections among Australian First Nations children: the ‘D-Kids’ study protocol

Introduction Globally, acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are a leading cause of childhood morbidity and mortality. While ARI-related mortality is low in Australia, First Nations infants are hospitalised with ARIs up to nine times more often than their non-First Nations counterparts. The gap is wid...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:BMJ Open Respiratory Research
Main Authors: Binks, Michael J, Bleakley, Amy S, Pizzutto, Susan J, Lamberth, Michelle, Powell, Verity, Nelson, Jane, Kirby, Adrienne, Morris, Peter S, Simon, David, Mulholland, E Kim, Rathnayake, Geetha, Leach, Amanda J, D'Antoine, Heather, Licciardi, Paul V, Snelling, Tom, Chang, Anne B
Other Authors: NHMRC
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BMJ 2023
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjresp-2023-001646
https://syndication.highwire.org/content/doi/10.1136/bmjresp-2023-001646
Description
Summary:Introduction Globally, acute respiratory infections (ARIs) are a leading cause of childhood morbidity and mortality. While ARI-related mortality is low in Australia, First Nations infants are hospitalised with ARIs up to nine times more often than their non-First Nations counterparts. The gap is widest in the Northern Territory (NT) where rates of both acute and chronic respiratory infection are among the highest reported in the world. Vitamin D deficiency is common among NT First Nations neonates and associated with an increased risk of ARI hospitalisation. We hypothesise that perinatal vitamin D supplementation will reduce the risk of ARI in the first year of life. Methods and analysis ‘D-Kids’ is a parallel (1:1), double-blind (allocation concealed), randomised placebo-controlled trial conducted among NT First Nations mother–infant pairs. Pregnant women and their babies (n=314) receive either vitamin D or placebo. Women receive 14 000 IU/week or placebo from 28 to 34 weeks gestation until birth and babies receive 4200 IU/week or placebo from birth until age 4 months. The primary outcome is the incidence of ARI episodes receiving medical attention in the first year of life. Secondary outcomes include circulating vitamin D level and nasal pathogen prevalence. Tertiary outcomes include infant immune cell phenotypes and challenge responses. Blood, nasal swabs, breast milk and saliva are collected longitudinally across four study visits: enrolment, birth, infant age 4 and 12 months. The sample size provides 90% power to detect a 27.5% relative reduction in new ARI episodes between groups. Ethics and dissemination This trial is approved by the NT Human Research Ethics Committee (2018-3160). Study outcomes will be disseminated to participant families, communities, local policy-makers, the broader research and clinical community via written and oral reports, education workshops, peer-reviewed journals, national and international conferences. Trial registration number ACTRN12618001174279.