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改变慢性肾脏病患者的饮食盐摄入量。

Altered dietary salt intake for people with chronic kidney disease.

机构信息

Wellbeing and Preventable Chronic Diseases Division, Menzies School of Health Research, Charles Darwin University, Brisbane, Australia.

Centre for Applied Health Economics, Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia.

出版信息

Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Jun 24;6(6):CD010070. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010070.pub3.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Evidence indicates that reducing dietary salt may reduce the incidence of heart disease and delay decline in kidney function in people with chronic kidney disease (CKD). This is an update of a review first published in 2015.

OBJECTIVES

To evaluate the benefits and harms of altering dietary salt for adults with CKD.

SEARCH METHODS

We searched the Cochrane Kidney and Transplant Register of Studies up to 6 October 2020 through contact with the Information Specialist using search terms relevant to this review. Studies in the Register are identified through searches of CENTRAL, MEDLINE, and EMBASE, conference proceedings, the International Clinical Trials Register (ICTRP) Search Portal and ClinicalTrials.gov.

SELECTION CRITERIA

Randomised controlled trials comparing two or more levels of salt intake in adults with any stage of CKD.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

Two authors independently assessed studies for eligibility, conducted risk of bias evaluation and evaluated confidence in the evidence using GRADE. Results were summarised using random effects models as risk ratios (RR) for dichotomous outcomes or mean differences (MD) for continuous outcomes, with 95% confidence intervals (CI).

MAIN RESULTS

We included 21 studies (1197 randomised participants), 12 in the earlier stages of CKD (779 randomised participants), seven in dialysis (363 randomised participants) and two in post-transplant (55 randomised participants). Selection bias was low in seven studies, high in one and unclear in 13. Performance and detection biases were low in four studies, high in two, and unclear in 15. Attrition and reporting biases were low in 10 studies, high in three and unclear in eight. Because duration of the included studies was too short (1 to 36 weeks) to test the effect of salt restriction on endpoints such as death, cardiovascular events or CKD progression, changes in salt intake on blood pressure and other secondary risk factors were examined. Reducing salt by mean -73.51 mmol/day (95% CI -92.76 to -54.27), equivalent to 4.2 g or 1690 mg sodium/day, reduced systolic/diastolic blood pressure by -6.91/-3.91 mm Hg (95% CI -8.82 to -4.99/-4.80 to -3.02; 19 studies, 1405 participants; high certainty evidence). Albuminuria was reduced by 36% (95% CI 26 to 44) in six studies, five of which were carried out in people in the earlier stages of CKD (MD -0.44, 95% CI -0.58 to -0.30; 501 participants; high certainty evidence). The evidence is very uncertain about the effect of lower salt intake on weight, as the weight change observed (-1.32 kg, 95% CI -1.94 to -0.70; 12 studies, 759 participants) may have been due to fluid volume, lean tissue, or body fat. Lower salt intake may reduce extracellular fluid volume in the earlier stages of CKD (-0.87 L, 95% CI -1.17 to -0.58; 3 studies; 187 participants; low certainty evidence). The evidence is very uncertain about the effect of lower salt intake on reduction in antihypertensive dose (RR 2.45, 95% CI 0.98 to 6.08; 8 studies; 754 participants). Lower salt intake may lead to  symptomatic hypotension (RR 6.70, 95% CI 2.40 to 18.69; 6 studies; 678 participants; moderate certainty evidence). Data were sparse for other types of adverse events.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found high certainty evidence that salt reduction reduced blood pressure in people with CKD, and albuminuria in people with earlier stage CKD in the short-term. If such reductions could be maintained long-term, this effect may translate to clinically significant reductions in CKD progression and cardiovascular events. Research into the long-term effects of sodium-restricted diet for people with CKD is warranted.

摘要

背景

有证据表明,减少饮食中的盐摄入量可能会降低慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者的心脏病发病率和肾功能下降速度。这是对 2015 年首次发表的综述的更新。

目的

评估改变 CKD 患者饮食盐摄入量的益处和危害。

检索方法

我们通过与信息专家联系,使用与本综述相关的检索词,检索了 Cochrane 肾脏病和移植登记处的研究,截至 2020 年 10 月 6 日。通过检索 CENTRAL、MEDLINE 和 EMBASE、会议论文集、国际临床试验注册中心(ICTRP)搜索门户和 ClinicalTrials.gov 来确定登记处中的研究。

选择标准

比较 CKD 任何阶段的成年人两种或多种盐摄入量的随机对照试验。

数据收集和分析

两位作者独立评估研究的入选标准、进行偏倚风险评估,并使用 GRADE 评估证据的可信度。使用随机效应模型汇总结果,以二分类结局的风险比(RR)或连续结局的均数差(MD)表示,置信区间(CI)为 95%。

主要结果

我们纳入了 21 项研究(1197 名随机参与者),其中 12 项研究在 CKD 的早期阶段(779 名随机参与者),7 项研究在透析阶段(363 名随机参与者),2 项研究在移植后阶段(55 名随机参与者)。在 7 项研究中,选择偏倚较低,在 1 项研究中,偏倚较高,在 13 项研究中,偏倚不明确。在 4 项研究中,表现和检测偏倚较低,在 2 项研究中,偏倚较高,在 15 项研究中,偏倚不明确。由于纳入研究的持续时间太短(1 至 36 周),无法测试盐限制对终点(如死亡、心血管事件或 CKD 进展)的影响,因此检查了盐摄入变化对血压和其他次要风险因素的影响。平均减少盐摄入量 -73.51mmol/天(95%CI -92.76 至 -54.27),相当于减少 4.2 克或 1690 毫克钠/天,可降低收缩压/舒张压 -6.91/-3.91mmHg(95%CI -8.82 至 -4.99/-4.80 至 -3.02;19 项研究,1405 名参与者;高确定性证据)。在 6 项研究中,白蛋白尿减少了 36%(95%CI 26 至 44),其中 5 项是在 CKD 的早期阶段进行的(MD -0.44,95%CI -0.58 至 -0.30;501 名参与者;高确定性证据)。由于体重变化(观察到的体重减轻 -1.32kg,95%CI -1.94 至 -0.70;12 项研究,759 名参与者)可能是由于液体量、瘦组织或体脂肪,因此关于较低盐摄入量对体重的影响的证据非常不确定。较低的盐摄入量可能会减少 CKD 早期阶段的细胞外液体积(-0.87L,95%CI -1.17 至 -0.58;3 项研究;187 名参与者;低确定性证据)。关于较低盐摄入量对降低降压药物剂量的影响的证据非常不确定(RR 2.45,95%CI 0.98 至 6.08;8 项研究,754 名参与者)。较低盐摄入可能导致有症状的低血压(RR 6.70,95%CI 2.40 至 18.69;6 项研究,678 名参与者;中等确定性证据)。关于其他类型不良事件的数据很少。

作者结论

我们发现,有高确定性证据表明盐的减少降低了 CKD 患者的血压,在 CKD 早期阶段患者的白蛋白尿减少。如果这种减少能够长期维持,这种效果可能会转化为对 CKD 进展和心血管事件的临床显著减少。有必要对 CKD 患者进行钠限制饮食的长期效果进行研究。

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