The effect of Vitamin-K1 and Colchicine on Vascular Calcification Activity in subjects with Diabetes Mellitus (ViKCoVaC): A double-blind 2x2 factorial randomized controlled trial
The effect of Vitamin-K1 and Colchicine on Vascular Calcification Activity in subjects with Diabetes Mellitus (ViKCoVaC): A double-blind 2x2 factorial randomized controlled trial
Bellinge et al., 2022 | J Nucl Cardiol | Rct
Citation
Bellinge Jamie W, Francis Roslyn J, ... Schultz Carl J. The effect of Vitamin-K1 and Colchicine on Vascular Calcification Activity in subjects with Diabetes Mellitus (ViKCoVaC): A double-blind 2x2 factorial randomized controlled trial. J Nucl Cardiol. 2022-Aug;29(4):1855-1866. doi:10.1007/s12350-021-02589-8
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is currently no treatment for attenuating progression of arterial calcification. 18F-sodium fluoride positron emission tomography (18F-NaF PET) locates regions of calcification activity. We tested whether vitamin-K1 or colchicine affected arterial calcification activity. METHODS: 154 patients with diabetes mellitus and coronary calcification, as detected using computed tomography (CT), were randomized to one of four treatment groups (placebo/placebo, vitamin-K1 [10 mg/day]/placebo, colchicine [0.5 mg/day]/placebo, vitamin-K1 [10 mg/day]/ colchicine [0.5 mg/day]) in a double-blind, placebo-controlled 2x2 factorial trial of three months duration. Change in coronary calcification activity was estimated as a change in coronary maximum tissue-to-background ratio (TBRmax) on 18F-NaF PET. RESULTS: 149 subjects completed follow-up (vitamin-K1: placebo = 73:76 and colchicine: placebo = 73:76). Neither vitamin-K1 nor colchicine had a statistically significant effect on the coronary TBRmax compared with placebo (mean difference for treatment groups 0·00 ± 0·16 and 0·01 ± 0·17, respectively, p > 0.05). There were no serious adverse effects reported with colchicine or vitamin-K1. CONCLUSIONS: In patients with type 2 diabetes, neither vitamin-K1 nor colchicine significantly decreases coronary calcification activity, as estimated by 18F-NaF PET, over a period of 3 months. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: ACTRN12616000024448.
Key Findings
149 subjects completed follow-up (vitamin-K1: placebo = 73:76 and colchicine: placebo = 73:76). Neither vitamin-K1 nor colchicine had a statistically significant effect on the coronary TBRmax compared with placebo (mean difference for treatment groups 0·00 ± 0·16 and 0·01 ± 0·17, respectively, p > 0.05). There were no serious adverse effects reported with colchicine or vitamin-K1.
Outcomes Measured
- Requires manual extraction
Population
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Population | diabetes mellitus and coronary |
| Sample Size | 154 |
| Age Range | See abstract |
| Condition | diabetes |
MeSH Terms
- Colchicine
- Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
- Double-Blind Method
- Humans
- Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography
- Sodium Fluoride
- Vascular Calcification
- Vitamin K 1
- Vitamins
Evidence Classification
- Level: Rct
- Publication Types: Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
- Vertical: vitamin-k-cardiovascular
Provenance
- PMID: 33825140
- DOI: 10.1007/s12350-021-02589-8
- PMCID: Not in PMC
- Verified: 2026-04-09 via PubMed E-utilities API
Source extracted via PubMed E-utilities API on 2026-04-09