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Very Low Protein Diet and Renal Death in Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)-ERIKA Study

A

Azienda Sanitaria ASL Avellino 2

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Chronic Renal Insufficiency

Treatments

Behavioral: Low protein diet
Behavioral: Very low protein diet

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00323713
KA1-1425

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine whether the use of a very low protein diet is effective in delaying the start of chronic dialysis treatment in patients affected by chronic kidney disease (CKD).

Full description

The prevalence of chronic dialysis patients is increasing worldwide because of the rising incidence of end stage renal disease, it is burdened by high cardiovascular risk, it is associated with a very high morbidity and mortality and it determines enormous costs for the community.

The improvement in the management of metabolic and cardiovascular complication associated to chronic kidney disease (CKD) since the early stages of the disease becomes mandatory in order to delay the start of dialysis and to ameliorate the whole patient outcome.

Dietary protein restriction represents a basic therapeutic approach in CKD, by reducing the accumulation of nitrogen catabolic substances, the phosphorus retention and the consequent hyperparathyroidism, the metabolic acidosis, the salt intake and the consequent hypertension, the proteinuria, and by improving the anemia and the glycemic tolerance, but the effects of the low protein diet on renal failure progression rate have not been definitely demonstrated.

Dietary effective reduction of just 0.2 g/kg/day of proteins is effective in ameliorating blood urea nitrogen, metabolic acidosis and hyperphosphoremia, and the very low protein diet (VLPD) allows a further improving of the metabolic control of uremia, it is safe, not affecting the nutritional status, and it is cost saving. VLPD has been suggested to delay the start of renal replacement therapy with respect to standard low protein diet, by mean of either secondary analysis of clinical trials or retrospective analysis.

Large randomized clinical trials (RCT) on this issue lack, and the effect of VLPD on renal death remain to be addressed. As well, information on patients' compliance to VLPD prescription and on the impact of VLPD on the quality of life are needed. Finally, also the effects of VLPD on both cardiovascular risk factors and mortality remain to be completely evaluated.

The primary aim of this study is to evaluate, by mean of a RCT, the effect of the very low protein diet on the renal death in renal patients affected by chronic renal insufficiency of moderate to advanced degree (CKD stages 4 and 5). Secondary aims are to evaluate the effect of VLPD on cardiovascular risk factors, morbidity and mortality, the adherence to VLPD, and the relationship between VLPD and quality of life.

Enrollment

360 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients with chronic renal insufficiency in stage CKD 4 and 5 (GFR < 30 ml/min/1.73m2, estimated by the 24-hours creatinine clearance) receiving conservative treatment for CKD
  • Incident patients with chronic renal insufficiency in stage CKD 4 and 5 (GFR < 30 ml/min/1.73m2, estimated by the 24-hours creatinine clearance), provided stable renal function determined by two 24-hour measurements of creatinine clearance 2 weeks a part

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients already on very low protein diet

  • Change of creatinine clearance > 30% within the last 3 months

  • Severe undernutrition as indicated by :

    1. BMI < 20 kg/m2 in presence of serum albumin < 3.0 g/dl, or BMI < 17.5 kg/m2 whatever albumin value
    2. body weight reduction > 7.5% within the last 3 months
  • Severe obesity as indicated by BMI > 35 kg/m2

  • Pregnancy or feeding

  • Chronic treatment with steroid or cytotoxic drugs

  • Fast progressing glomerulonephritis

  • Active SLE and vasculitis

  • Cardiac failure stage IV NYHA

  • Advanced liver cirrhosis

  • Active cancer diseases

  • Severe encephalopathy associated with lack of spontaneous feeding

  • Chronic obstructive respiratory diseases needing oxygen treatment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

360 participants in 2 patient groups

VLPD diet
Experimental group
Description:
Adavnced CKD patients (stage 4-5) on a very low protein diet
Treatment:
Behavioral: Very low protein diet
LPD diet
Active Comparator group
Description:
Adavnced CKD patients (stage 4-5) on a low protein diet
Treatment:
Behavioral: Low protein diet

Trial contacts and locations

17

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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