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Stoss therapy is safe for treatment of vitamin D deficiency in pediatric patients undergoing HSCT
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Stoss therapy is safe for treatment of vitamin D deficiency in pediatric patients undergoing HSCT

Jessica Bodea, Kristen Beebe, Courtney Campbell, Dana Salzberg, Holly Miller, Roberta Adams, Lucia Mirea, Paul Castillo, Biljana Horn, Sandhya Bansal, …
Bone marrow transplantation (Basingstoke), Vol.56(9), pp.2137-2143
09/01/2021
PMID: 33875811

Abstract

Adolescent Adult Child Child, Preschool Dietary Supplements Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation Humans Infant Treatment Outcome Vitamin D Vitamin D Deficiency - drug therapy Young Adult
Vitamin D deficiency remains common among pediatric patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplant (HSCT) despite both aggressive and standard of care strategies. This study examined the safety and efficacy of single high-dose oral vitamin D therapy (Stoss therapy) for treatment of vitamin D deficiency in HSCT recipients. Patients ages 1-21 years presenting for HSCT were randomized to receive either Stoss regimen plus weekly/daily supplementation or standard of care, per US Endocrine Society guidelines. Among the total 48 subjects, 22 (46%) were randomized to Stoss and 26 (54%) to control arms. Baseline 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OHD) levels were insufficient/deficient in total of 34 (71%) patients, without difference between treatment groups. The Stoss regimen was well tolerated and no toxicity was observed. At Day +30, mean 25-OHD levels were significantly higher (P = 0.04) with Stoss (42.3 ± 12 μg/l) compared to controls (35.6 ± 14.3 μg/l), and a higher proportion of Stoss patients had adequate vitamin D levels than controls (85% vs 65%). Stoss therapy is a safe and efficacious treatment option for vitamin D deficiency in children undergoing HSCT and may achieve sufficient levels more rapidly than standard of care. This trial was registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03176849.

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