Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Harold Simmons Center for Chronic Disease Research and Epidemiology, University of California, Irvine, Orange, California; Department of Clinical Nutrition and Food Management, Tokushima University Graduate School of Nutrition and Biosciences, Tokushima, Japan; Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan; Department of Pediatrics, Kitasato University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan.
Division of Nephrology and Hypertension, Harold Simmons Center for Chronic Disease Research and Epidemiology, University of California, Irvine, Orange, California.
J Ren Nutr. 2021 Jul;31(4):411-420. doi: 10.1053/j.jrn.2020.05.008. Epub 2020 Oct 27.
Among hemodialysis patients, clinical practice guidelines recommend dietary potassium restriction given concerns about potential hyperkalemia leading to malignant arrhythmias and mortality. However, there are sparse data informing recommendations for dietary potassium intake in this population. We thus sought to examine the relationship between dietary potassium intake and death risk in a prospective cohort of hemodialysis patients.
Among 415 hemodialysis patients from the prospective "Malnutrition, Diet, and Racial Disparities in Chronic Kidney Disease" cohort recruited across 16 outpatient dialysis clinics, information regarding dietary potassium intake was obtained using Food Frequency Questionnaires administered over October 2011 to March 2015. We first examined associations of baseline dietary potassium intake categorized as tertiles with mortality risk using Cox regression. We then examined clinical characteristics associated with low dietary potassium intake (defined as the lowest tertile) using logistic regression.
In expanded case-mix Cox analyses, patients whose dietary potassium intake was in the lowest tertile had higher mortality (ref: highest tertile) (adjusted hazard ratio 1.74, 95% confidence interval 1.14-2.66). These associations had even greater magnitude of risk following adjustment for laboratory and nutritional covariates (adjusted hazard ratio 2.65, 95% confidence interval 1.40-5.04). In expanded case-mix restricted cubic spline analyses, there was a monotonic increase in mortality risk with incrementally lower dietary potassium intake. In expanded case-mix logistic regression models, female sex; higher serum bicarbonate; and lower dietary energy, protein, and fiber intake were associated with low dietary potassium intake.
In a prospective cohort of hemodialysis patients, lower dietary potassium intake was associated with higher mortality risk. These findings suggest that excessive dietary potassium restriction may be deleterious in hemodialysis patients, and further studies are needed to determine the optimal dietary potassium intake in this population.
在血液透析患者中,鉴于潜在高钾血症导致恶性心律失常和死亡的风险,临床实践指南建议限制饮食中的钾摄入。然而,关于该人群饮食钾摄入的建议数据却很少。因此,我们试图在血液透析患者的前瞻性队列中研究饮食钾摄入与死亡风险之间的关系。
在从横跨 16 家门诊透析诊所招募的前瞻性“营养不良、饮食和慢性肾脏病的种族差异”队列中,共有 415 名血液透析患者,通过 2011 年 10 月至 2015 年 3 月期间进行的食物频率问卷获得关于饮食钾摄入的信息。我们首先使用 Cox 回归检验了基线饮食钾摄入分为三分位组与死亡率风险的相关性。然后,我们使用逻辑回归检验了与低饮食钾摄入(定义为最低三分位组)相关的临床特征。
在扩展病例混合 Cox 分析中,饮食钾摄入最低的患者死亡率更高(参考:最高三分位组)(调整后的危险比 1.74,95%置信区间 1.14-2.66)。在调整实验室和营养协变量后,这些关联的风险更大(调整后的危险比 2.65,95%置信区间 1.40-5.04)。在扩展病例混合受限立方样条分析中,死亡率风险随着饮食钾摄入的逐渐降低而呈单调递增。在扩展病例混合逻辑回归模型中,女性;更高的血清碳酸氢盐;以及更低的饮食能量、蛋白质和纤维摄入与低饮食钾摄入相关。
在血液透析患者的前瞻性队列中,较低的饮食钾摄入与更高的死亡率风险相关。这些发现表明,在血液透析患者中过度限制饮食钾可能有害,需要进一步研究来确定该人群的最佳饮食钾摄入量。