Center for Human Nutrition and.
Welch Center for Prevention, Epidemiology, and Clinical Research, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland; and.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2019 May 7;14(5):682-691. doi: 10.2215/CJN.12391018. Epub 2019 Apr 25.
The association between plant-based diets, incident CKD, and kidney function decline has not been examined in the general population. We prospectively investigated this relationship in a population-based study, and evaluated if risk varied by different types of plant-based diets.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: Analyses were conducted in a sample of 14,686 middle-aged adults enrolled in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities study. Diets were characterized using four plant-based diet indices. In the overall plant-based diet index, all plant foods were positively scored; in the healthy plant-based diet index, only healthful plant foods were positively scored; in the provegetarian diet, selected plant foods were positively scored. In the less healthy plant-based diet index, only less healthful plant foods were positively scored. All indices negatively scored animal foods. We used Cox proportional hazards models to study the association with incident CKD and linear mixed models to examine decline in eGFR, adjusting for confounders.
During a median follow-up of 24 years, 4343 incident CKD cases occurred. Higher adherence to a healthy plant-based diet (HR comparing quintile 5 versus quintile 1 [HR], 0.86; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 0.78 to 0.96; for trend =0.001) and a provegetarian diet (HR, 0.90; 95% CI, 0.82 to 0.99; for trend =0.03) were associated with a lower risk of CKD, whereas higher adherence to a less healthy plant-based diet (HR, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.01 to 1.21; for trend =0.04) was associated with an elevated risk. Higher adherence to an overall plant-based diet and a healthy plant-based diet was associated with slower eGFR decline. The proportion of CKD attributable to lower adherence to healthy plant-based diets was 4.1% (95% CI, 0.6% to 8.3%).
Higher adherence to healthy plant-based diets and a vegetarian diet was associated with favorable kidney disease outcomes.
植物性饮食与慢性肾脏病(CKD)的发生和肾功能下降之间的关系尚未在普通人群中进行研究。我们在一项基于人群的研究中前瞻性地研究了这种关系,并评估了不同类型的植物性饮食的风险是否不同。
设计、设置、参与者和测量:在参加动脉粥样硬化风险社区研究的 14686 名中年成年人的样本中进行了分析。使用四种植物性饮食指数来描述饮食。在整体植物性饮食指数中,所有植物性食物都被给予正分;在健康植物性饮食指数中,只有健康的植物性食物被给予正分;在纯素饮食中,选择的植物性食物被给予正分。在不太健康的植物性饮食指数中,只有不太健康的植物性食物被给予正分。所有指数都给动物性食物负分。我们使用 Cox 比例风险模型研究与新发 CKD 的关系,并使用线性混合模型在调整混杂因素后检查 eGFR 的下降。
在中位数为 24 年的随访期间,发生了 4343 例新发 CKD 病例。较高的健康植物性饮食依从性(比较五分位 5 与五分位 1 的 HR [HR],0.86;95%置信区间 [95%CI],0.78 至 0.96;趋势 P=0.001)和纯素饮食(HR,0.90;95%CI,0.82 至 0.99;趋势 P=0.03)与较低的 CKD 风险相关,而较高的不太健康的植物性饮食依从性(HR,1.11;95%CI,1.01 至 1.21;趋势 P=0.04)与较高的风险相关。较高的整体植物性饮食和健康植物性饮食的依从性与 eGFR 下降较慢相关。归因于较低的健康植物性饮食依从性的 CKD 比例为 4.1%(95%CI,0.6%至 8.3%)。
较高的健康植物性饮食和素食饮食依从性与有利的肾脏疾病结局相关。