Food as medicine: targeting the uraemic phenotype in chronic kidney disease
- PMID: 32963366
- DOI: 10.1038/s41581-020-00345-8
Food as medicine: targeting the uraemic phenotype in chronic kidney disease
Abstract
The observation that unhealthy diets (those that are low in whole grains, fruits and vegetables, and high in sugar, salt, saturated fat and ultra-processed foods) are a major risk factor for poor health outcomes has boosted interest in the concept of 'food as medicine'. This concept is especially relevant to metabolic diseases, such as chronic kidney disease (CKD), in which dietary approaches are already used to ameliorate metabolic and nutritional complications. Increased awareness that toxic uraemic metabolites originate not only from intermediary metabolism but also from gut microbial metabolism, which is directly influenced by diet, has fuelled interest in the potential of 'food as medicine' approaches in CKD beyond the current strategies of protein, sodium and phosphate restriction. Bioactive nutrients can alter the composition and metabolism of the microbiota, act as modulators of transcription factors involved in inflammation and oxidative stress, mitigate mitochondrial dysfunction, act as senolytics and impact the epigenome by altering one-carbon metabolism. As gut dysbiosis, inflammation, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, premature ageing and epigenetic changes are common features of CKD, these findings suggest that tailored, healthy diets that include bioactive nutrients as part of the foodome could potentially be used to prevent and treat CKD and its complications.
References
-
- Global Burden of Diseas. Diet collaborators. health effects of dietary risks in 195 countries, 1990-2017: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017. Lancet 393, 1958–1972 (2019).
-
- Srour, B. et al. Ultraprocessed food consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes among participants of the nutrinet-santé prospective cohort. JAMA Intern. Med. 180, 283–291 (2019). - PMC
-
- World Health Organization. WHO report on the global tobacco epidemic. WHO https://www.who.int/tobacco/global_report/2017/en/ (2017).
-
- Stenvinkel, P., Meyer, C. J., Block, G. A., Chertow, G. M., Shiels, P. G. Understanding the role of the cytoprotective transcription factor nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2-lessons from evolution, the animal kingdom and rare progeroid syndromes. Nephrol. Dial. Transplant. https://doi.org/10.1093/ndt/gfz120 (2019).
-
- O’Neill, B. & Raggi, P. The ketogenic diet pros and cons. Atherosclerosis 292, 119–126 (2019). - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Research Materials

