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Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets

BACKGROUND: There is no single, gold-standard, low-protein diet (LPD) for CKD patients; the best compliance is probably obtained by personalization. This study tests the hypothesis that a multiple choice diet network allows patients to attain a good compliance level, and that, in an open-choice syst...

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Autores principales: Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara, Nazha, Marta, Capizzi, Irene, Vigotti, Federica Neve, Scognamiglio, Stefania, Consiglio, Valentina, Mongilardi, Elena, Bilocati, Marilisa, Avagnina, Paolo, Versino, Elisabetta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5142321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27927186
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-016-0413-5
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author Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
Nazha, Marta
Capizzi, Irene
Vigotti, Federica Neve
Scognamiglio, Stefania
Consiglio, Valentina
Mongilardi, Elena
Bilocati, Marilisa
Avagnina, Paolo
Versino, Elisabetta
author_facet Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
Nazha, Marta
Capizzi, Irene
Vigotti, Federica Neve
Scognamiglio, Stefania
Consiglio, Valentina
Mongilardi, Elena
Bilocati, Marilisa
Avagnina, Paolo
Versino, Elisabetta
author_sort Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: There is no single, gold-standard, low-protein diet (LPD) for CKD patients; the best compliance is probably obtained by personalization. This study tests the hypothesis that a multiple choice diet network allows patients to attain a good compliance level, and that, in an open-choice system, overall results are not dependent upon the specific diet, but upon the clinical characteristics of the patients. METHODS: Observational study: Three LPD options were offered to all patients with severe or rapidly progressive CKD: vegan diets supplemented with alpha-ketoacids and essential aminoacids; protein-free food in substitution of normal bread and pasta; other (traditional, vegan non supplemented and tailored). Dialysis-free follow-up and survival were analyzed by Kaplan Meier curves according to diet, comorbidity and age. Compliance and metabolic control were estimated in 147 subjects on diet at March 2015, with recent complete data, prescribed protein intake 0.6 g/Kg/day. Protein intake was assessed by Maroni Mitch formula. RESULTS: Four hundreds and forty nine patients followed a LPD in December, 2007- March, 2015 (90% moderately restricted LPDs, 0.6 g/Kg/day of protein, 10% at lower targets); age (median 70 (19–97)) and comorbidity (Charlson index: 7) characterized our population as being in line with the usual CKD European population. Median e-GFR at start of the diet was 20 mL/min, 33.2% of the patients were diabetics. Baseline data differ significantly across diets: protein-free schemas are preferred by older, high-comorbidity patients (median age 76 years, Charlson index 8, GFR 20.5 mL/min, Proteinuria: 0.3 g/day), supplemented vegan diets by younger patients with lower GFR and higher proteinuria (median age 65 years, Charlson index 6, GFR 18.9 mL/min; Proteinuria: 1.2 g/day); other diets are chosen by an intermediate population (median age 71 years, Charlson index 6; GFR 22.5 mL/min; Proteinuria: 0.9 g/day); (p <0.001 for age, Charlson index, proteinuria, GFR). Adherence was good, only 1.1% of the patients were lost to follow-up and protein intake was at target in most of the cases with no differences among LPDs (protein intake: 0.47 (0.26–0.86) g/Kg/day). After adjustment for confounders, and/or selection of similar populations, no difference in mortality or dialysis start was observed on the different LPDs. Below the threshold of e-GFR 15 mL/min, 50% of the patients remain dialysis free for at least two years. CONCLUSION: A multiple choice LPD system may allow reaching good adherence, without competition among diets, and with promising results in terms of dialysis-free follow-up. The advantages with respect to a non-customized approach deserve confirmation in further comparative studies or RCTs.
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spelling pubmed-51423212016-12-15 Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara Nazha, Marta Capizzi, Irene Vigotti, Federica Neve Scognamiglio, Stefania Consiglio, Valentina Mongilardi, Elena Bilocati, Marilisa Avagnina, Paolo Versino, Elisabetta BMC Nephrol Research Article BACKGROUND: There is no single, gold-standard, low-protein diet (LPD) for CKD patients; the best compliance is probably obtained by personalization. This study tests the hypothesis that a multiple choice diet network allows patients to attain a good compliance level, and that, in an open-choice system, overall results are not dependent upon the specific diet, but upon the clinical characteristics of the patients. METHODS: Observational study: Three LPD options were offered to all patients with severe or rapidly progressive CKD: vegan diets supplemented with alpha-ketoacids and essential aminoacids; protein-free food in substitution of normal bread and pasta; other (traditional, vegan non supplemented and tailored). Dialysis-free follow-up and survival were analyzed by Kaplan Meier curves according to diet, comorbidity and age. Compliance and metabolic control were estimated in 147 subjects on diet at March 2015, with recent complete data, prescribed protein intake 0.6 g/Kg/day. Protein intake was assessed by Maroni Mitch formula. RESULTS: Four hundreds and forty nine patients followed a LPD in December, 2007- March, 2015 (90% moderately restricted LPDs, 0.6 g/Kg/day of protein, 10% at lower targets); age (median 70 (19–97)) and comorbidity (Charlson index: 7) characterized our population as being in line with the usual CKD European population. Median e-GFR at start of the diet was 20 mL/min, 33.2% of the patients were diabetics. Baseline data differ significantly across diets: protein-free schemas are preferred by older, high-comorbidity patients (median age 76 years, Charlson index 8, GFR 20.5 mL/min, Proteinuria: 0.3 g/day), supplemented vegan diets by younger patients with lower GFR and higher proteinuria (median age 65 years, Charlson index 6, GFR 18.9 mL/min; Proteinuria: 1.2 g/day); other diets are chosen by an intermediate population (median age 71 years, Charlson index 6; GFR 22.5 mL/min; Proteinuria: 0.9 g/day); (p <0.001 for age, Charlson index, proteinuria, GFR). Adherence was good, only 1.1% of the patients were lost to follow-up and protein intake was at target in most of the cases with no differences among LPDs (protein intake: 0.47 (0.26–0.86) g/Kg/day). After adjustment for confounders, and/or selection of similar populations, no difference in mortality or dialysis start was observed on the different LPDs. Below the threshold of e-GFR 15 mL/min, 50% of the patients remain dialysis free for at least two years. CONCLUSION: A multiple choice LPD system may allow reaching good adherence, without competition among diets, and with promising results in terms of dialysis-free follow-up. The advantages with respect to a non-customized approach deserve confirmation in further comparative studies or RCTs. BioMed Central 2016-12-07 /pmc/articles/PMC5142321/ /pubmed/27927186 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-016-0413-5 Text en © The Author(s). 2016 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research Article
Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
Nazha, Marta
Capizzi, Irene
Vigotti, Federica Neve
Scognamiglio, Stefania
Consiglio, Valentina
Mongilardi, Elena
Bilocati, Marilisa
Avagnina, Paolo
Versino, Elisabetta
Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
title Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
title_full Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
title_fullStr Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
title_full_unstemmed Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
title_short Diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
title_sort diet as a system: an observational study investigating a multi-choice system of moderately restricted low-protein diets
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5142321/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27927186
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12882-016-0413-5
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