Clinical Trial: Oral Vitamin D Substitution Weekly or Monthly and Adherence

Study Status: Not yet recruiting
Recruit Status: Not yet recruiting
Study Type: Interventional




Official Title: Oral Vitamin D Substitution Weekly or Monthly - Which Procedure Leads to Highest Adherence? A Prospective Intervention Study in Outpatient Care

Brief Summary: Vitamin D deficiency (defined as 25(OH)-vitamin D serum level <50 nmol/l) is cured with supplementation by mouth. National guidelines recommend the administration of 800 IU cholecalciferol daily for an effective treatment, especially during the winter (poor sun exposition). Commercially available pharmaceutical forms are liquid in Switzerland (drops) and solid forms in Germany (tablets and capsules). Because therapeutic range of vitamin D3 is wide and toxicity is seldom reached, even after the consumption of 200'000 IU, and because the administration of 8 drops daily is inconvenient, weekly and monthly administrations of the cumulative amount (i.e., 5'600 IU weekly or 24'000 IU monthly) have been investigated. Both administration schedules are therapeutic equivalent. The study aims to investigate which form (liquid or solid) and which schedule (weekly or monthly) procure the highest adherence behavior with outpatients under polypharmacy i.e., with 4 or more medications daily. The investigators will use commercially available Swiss and German products.