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Low Protein Diet, Gut Microbiome and Chronic Kidney Disease

Exploring the Role of Low Protein Diet on the Gut Microbiome, Related Metabolites and Renal Function in Chronic Kidney Disease

Status
UNKNOWN
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05019599
Enrollment
100
Registered
2021-08-25
Start date
2019-08-01
Completion date
2021-10-31
Last updated
2021-08-25

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Chronic Kidney Diseases

Brief summary

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a worldwide public health dilemma because of close association with multiple comorbidities, demanding high cardiovascular events, mortality and expensive medical cost. Novel and effective therapeutic measures remain urgently needed to reduce burden and impact of disease. Advanced renal failure can profoundly alter the biochemical milieu of the gastrointestinal tract leading to a leak gut. Application of 16s rRNA gene analysis identified an increase of Clostridia, Actinobacteria, and Gammaproteobacteria in hemodialysis patients and decrease of Bifidobacterium and lactobacillus in peritoneal patients. This altered microbiome consequently affect production of indole or phenol derived uremic toxins leading to renal damage. Our preliminary results indicated reduced number and diversity of intestinal microbes CKD patients compared to normal. Different dietary nutrients can affect the gut microbiome and derive several deleterious metabolites leading to metabolic disarrangement. Clinically, low-protein diet should be prescribe to renal patients to preserve renal function and high fat content are usually recommended to avoid caloric malnutrition to dietary restriction. The changes of diet-microbiome-metabolite interaction are large unknown with this dietary manipulation. The aims of this study is to determine the renal progression-associated gene and taxonomic alterations bymetagenome-wide association studies and the functional characterization of gut microbiome in CKD patients receiving different low-protein or high-fat diets. The results of the study will provide insight on the exact role of dietary manipulation in CKD patients from gut-renal cross talk.

Interventions

Low protein diet (\<0.8g/kg/BW/day)

Sponsors

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan
CollaboratorOTHER_GOV
Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

nutritional intervention with low protein diet (\< 0.8 G protein/kg body weight/day)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
30 Years to 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

1. . Patients aged 30-90 years with diagnosis of CKD (defined as abovementioned). 2. . Sign the inform consent and agree to participate in this study. 3. . Compliant to low protein diet (defined as protein intake \<0.8 g/Kg/day) for 4 weeks assessed by 24h urine urea estimates, before enrollment

Exclusion criteria

1. . History of any malignancy, liver cirrhosis, intestinal operation, irritable bowel syndrome, cardiovascular disease (defined as myocardial infarction, documented Q wave on EKG, unstable angina, coronary artery disease with stenosis \> 75%, congestive heart failure with Ejection Fraction \< 50% and cerebrovascular disease) in the past 3 months. 2. . History of or infection disease requiring admission in the past 3 months or, concomitant antibiotics use. 3. . Concomitant use of probiotics or prebiotics. 4. . Pregnancy. 5. . Renal transplant recipients.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
change of gut microbiota3 monthschange of relative abundance of microbes
change of host metabolite concentration3 monthschange of concentration of serum metabolomic profile
change of renal function3 monthsserum creatinine, estimated glomerular filtration rate or urine total protein

Countries

Taiwan

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026