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Clinical Trial NCT06568315 (CaMMS) for Anemia, Iron Deficiency is recruiting. See the Trial Radar Card View and AI discovery tools for all the details. Or ask anything here.
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Co-administration of Calcium and Multiple Micronutrient Supplements for Maternal and Newborn Hemoglobin and Iron Status (CaMMS)

Recruiting
Clinical Trial NCT06568315 (CaMMS) is designed to study Prevention for Anemia, Iron Deficiency. It is a Phase 3 interventional trial that is recruiting, having started on 25 August 2025, with plans to enroll 3,200 participants. Led by Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, it is expected to complete by 1 August 2026. The latest data from ClinicalTrials.gov was last updated on 17 September 2025.
Brief Summary
The World Health Organization (WHO) currently recommends the pregnant women receive iron-containing supplements and, in settings where calcium intake is low, calcium supplements. Supplements are to be taken at two separate times of the day as calcium may interfere with iron absorption. The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether taking daily calcium supplements and iron-containing multiple micronutrient supplements together, at the same time, has any negative impact on the hemoglobin or iron status of pregnant women or the woman's infants. Participants will be randomly assigned and counseled to either take the supplements together every morning or to take the multiple micronutrient supplement in the morning and the calcium supplement in the evening. Participants will visit the antenatal clinic monthly and be asked to provide a blood sample in early, mid, and late pregnancy. Researchers will also take blood samples from infants at the time of birth.
Detailed Description
Women of reproductive age in low-and-middle-income countries typically consume diets inadequate in many micronutrients. Resulting micronutrient deficiencies are further exacerbated during pregnancy by the increased demands of the developing fetus. Studies show that antenatal micronutrient supplementation can have important benefits for maternal and infant health. While WHO currently recommends daily iron and folic acid supplementation, many countries are transitioning to multiple micronutrient supplementation (MMS) based on evidence of its further benefit in reducing risk of low birth weight, small-for-gestational age births, stillbirths, and preterm delivery. WHO also recommends calcium supplementation for women in settings where calcium intake is low to reduce high blood pressure and prevent preeclampsia and preterm birth.

Women are instructed to take calcium supplements separately from iron-containing supplements to avoid any negative impact of calcium on iron absorption. However, evidence that calcium limits iron absorption is largely from studies of single test meals. Research on the longer-term implications of consuming the two nutrients together for iron status and hemoglobin is limited, particularly in pregnancy. This is an important research question as limiting the number of times per day that a woman needs to take supplements is likely to improve adherence to the regimen. There is also interest in designing a new MMS formulation that includes calcium such that women could take a single tablet daily.

This individually randomized controlled non-inferiority trial will enroll 1,600 women in both Burkina Faso and Pakistan to assess the impact of co-administering calcium (500 mg elemental calcium as calcium carbonate) and multiple micronutrient supplements (including 30 mg elemental iron), compared with the currently recommended practice of taking the supplements at two separate times of the day, on hematological and iron status of pregnant women and the women's infants. The sample size is based on a non-inferiority margin of -3.0 g/L, 90% power, a one-sided α=0.025, a standard deviation of 17 g/L for the primary hemoglobin outcome, and 15% loss to follow-up.

Potentially eligible women will be identified through antenatal care visits in Burkina Faso and household visits in Pakistan. For those who consent to screening, research staff will measure hemoglobin and conduct a fetal ultrasound exam. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are provided below. Research staff will obtain written documentation of informed consent.

At enrollment, women will be randomized, and research staff will collect socio-demographic data, take anthropometric and blood pressure measurements, and collect a venous blood sample. Women will receive counseling based on the randomly assigned intervention and be given a supply of study supplements. Research staff will see women monthly at antenatal visits to collect information on adherence by recall and pill count, side effects, signs/symptoms of anemia, and information on any iron treatment that women may have received between visits. Iron treatment prescribed by providers outside of the trial will also be abstracted from medical records. At the mid-pregnancy (20<24 weeks) and late pregnancy (30<34 weeks) visits, research staff will take hemoglobin (HemoCue), anthropometric and blood pressure measurements and collect venous blood samples. Women with severe anemia (<70 g/L) will be referred for treatment. Within 72 hours of birth, research staff will collect a heel prick blood sample from infants. Blood samples will be processed at antenatal clinics and transferred to central laboratories for measurement of hematological parameters, iron status, and inflammation.

Official Title

Co-administration of Calcium and Multiple Micronutrient Supplements for Maternal and Newborn Hemoglobin and Iron Status: A Randomized Non-inferiority Trial in Burkina Faso and Pakistan

Conditions
Anemia, Iron Deficiency
Other Study IDs
  • CaMMS
  • IRB00030029
  • INV036663 (Other Grant/Funding Number) (Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation)
  • 1911-04269 (Other Grant/Funding Number) (Children's Investment Fund Foundation)
NCT ID Number
Start Date (Actual)
2025-08-25
Last Update Posted
2025-09-17
Completion Date (Estimated)
2026-08
Enrollment (Estimated)
3,200
Study Type
Interventional
PHASE
Phase 3
Status
Recruiting
Keywords
calcium
iron
supplementation
anemia
pregnancy
Primary Purpose
Prevention
Design Allocation
Randomized
Interventional Model
Parallel
Masking
Double
Arms / Interventions
Participant Group/ArmIntervention/Treatment
ExperimentalConcurrent MMS / Calcium
Daily multiple micronutrient supplement (providing 30 mg iron) taken concurrently with daily calcium supplement (500 mg)
Concurrent Multiple Micronutrient and Calcium Supplementation
Participants counseled to take United Nations International Multiple Micronutrient Antenatal Preparation (UNIMMAP) multiple micronutrient supplement providing 30 mg elemental iron and calcium supplement providing 500 mg elemental calcium as 1250 mg calcium carbonate together every morning from enrollment through the end of pregnancy
Active ComparatorSeparate MMS / Calcium
Daily multiple micronutrient supplement (providing 30 mg iron) taken separately from daily calcium supplement (500 mg)
Separate Multiple Micronutrient and Calcium Supplementation
Participants counseled to take United Nations International Multiple Micronutrient Antenatal Preparation (UNIMMAP) multiple micronutrient supplement (MMS) providing 30 mg elemental iron every morning and calcium supplement providing 500 mg elemental calcium as 1250 mg calcium carbonate every evening from enrollment through the end of pregnancy
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome MeasureMeasure DescriptionTime Frame
Hemoglobin concentration of pregnant women
Hemoglobin measured by hematology analyzer
30<34 weeks of gestation
Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome MeasureMeasure DescriptionTime Frame
Ferritin concentration
Ferritin (μg/L)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) concentration
sTfR (mg/L)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Hepcidin concentration
Hepcidin (ng/mL)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Erythropoietin (EPO) concentration
EPO (mIU/mL)
30<34 weeks of gestation
sTfR-Ferritin index
sTfR:log10(ferritin)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Hepcidin-EPO ratio
Hepcidin:EPO
30<34 weeks of gestation
Red blood cell (RBC) count
RBC count
30<34 weeks of gestation
Mean corpuscular volume (MCV)
MCV (fL)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH)
MCH (pg)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC)
MCHC (g/dL)
30<34 weeks of gestation
Hemoglobin concentration of infants
Hemoglobin (g/L) measured by HemoCue
within 72 hours of birth
Ferritin concentration of infants
Ferritin (μg/L)
within 72 hours of birth
Eligibility Criteria

Eligible Ages
Child, Adult, Older Adult
Minimum Age
15 Years
Eligible Sexes
Female
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes
  • Burkina Faso: married or unmarried pregnant women aged ≥15 years
  • Pakistan: married pregnant women ≥18 years
  • Willing to receive all antenatal care at a study clinic
  • Willing to stop iron folic acid supplementation to receive the study intervention
  • Hb ≥70 g/L
  • 6<20 weeks of gestation based on fetal ultrasound

  • Burkina Faso: <15 years or unmarried pregnant women <18 years without consent from parent / guardian
  • Pakistan: pregnant women <18 years.
  • Unwilling to receive antenatal care at a study clinic
  • Unwilling to stop iron folic acid supplementation to receive the study intervention
  • Hemoglobin < 70 g/L
  • <6 weeks of gestation or ≥20 weeks of gestation
  • Non-viable or extrauterine pregnancy
  • Any contraindications to study supplements
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health logoJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
  • ⚕️Institut Africain de Santé Publique (African Institute of Public Health)
  • 🎓Aga Khan University
  • 🧬Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
  • 🧬Children's Investment Fund Foundation
Study Central Contact
Contact: Amanda C Palmer, PhD, 1 (410) 955-2061, [email protected]
Contact: Monica Pasqualino, PhD, [email protected]
2 Study Locations in 2 Countries
Institut Africain de Santé Publique (African Institute of Public Health), Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso
Seni Baguiya, PhD, Contact, 70 26 14 62, [email protected]
Seni Kouanda, PhD, Principal Investigator
Adama Baguiya, MD, Sub-Investigator
Recruiting
Aga Khan University, Karachi, Pakistan
Saleem Jessani, MBBS, Contact, 021-34864885, [email protected]
Sarah Saleem, MBBS, Principal Investigator
Saleem Jessani, MBBS, Sub-Investigator
Recruiting