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Safety of a Healthy Plant-based Diet With Higher Potassium Content, Compared to a Healthy Plant-based Diet With Limited Potassium Content in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease: A Pilot Study
Sponsor: Karolinska Institutet
Summary
For many years, people with moderate to advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) have been advised to limit their intake of potassium, a mineral found in many foods such as fruit, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and nuts. The reason for this has been the risk of hyperkalemia, a condition in which the potassium level in the blood becomes too high and can be dangerous. In recent years, however, this view has been questioned. New research suggests that the link between potassium in food and high potassium levels in the blood may not be as clear as previously thought. People who follow a strict potassium-restricted diet experience a lower quality of life and less satisfaction with their dietary treatment. At the same time, they miss out on the health benefits of eating a varied and nutritious diet. Today, many experts advocate a more individualized approach to potassium intake: instead of generally restricting potassium, the goal should be to maintain normal potassium levels in the blood, while encouraging a healthy diet. However, this message is not always clear in healthcare, and many people therefore continue to avoid potassium-rich foods altogether. The result is that they eat fewer natural ingredients and instead consume more processed and ultra-processed foods. Such foods can be more harmful, partly because they often contain potassium additives that are absorbed effectively by the body and their quantities are not reported in the nutritional label. This "hidden" potassium can contribute more to high potassium levels in the blood than the potassium that occurs naturally in plant-based foods. In addition, potassium from whole plant-based foods is absorbed more slowly, partly due to its fiber content. Plant-based diets may also have other positive effects for people with kidney disease: they can contribute to reduced blood acidity, known as metabolic acidosis, healthier gut flora, lower levels of inflammation, and reduced phosphorus intake. Together, these factors can counteract several of the metabolic complications associated with kidney disease. In a previous study, our research group showed that even patients with advanced kidney disease (CKD stage 4-5) and already elevated potassium levels could follow a healthy plant-based diet if they also used a potassium-binding drug (sodium zirconium cyclosilicate, SZC). This enabled them to eat more fruit, vegetables, and legumes, while also experiencing improved quality of life. The current study builds on these results and is planned as a pilot study in which patients with moderate to advanced kidney disease, but who are not yet being treated with dialysis, are assigned to two different dietary strategies for six months: * Healthy plant-based diet (healthy-PBD): a more liberal and balanced plant-based diet without specific potassium restrictions. * Potassium-restricted plant-based diet (restricted-PBD): a traditional plant-based diet with restrictions on potassium-rich foods, according to current standard recommendations. The main purpose is to investigate whether the healthy plant-based diet leads to more or more severe cases of hyperkalemia than the restricted diet. Our hypothesis is that potassium levels may increase slightly in the group with a liberal diet, but not to dangerous levels. The study will also examine secondary outcomes, such as quality of life, satisfaction with treatment, and how well patients accept the diet. In addition, taste experiences will be tested with taste strips (sweet, sour, salt, bitter and umami) before and after the intervention in both groups. If this pilot study shows that a healthier and less restrictive diet is safe, it could pave the way for a larger study investigating the long-term metabolic effects of a plant-based diet in kidney care.
Official title: Säkerheten av en hälsosam växtbaserad Kost Med högre kaliuminnerhåll, jämfört Med en hälsosam växtbaserad Kost Med begränsat kaliuminnehåll Hos Patienter Med Kronisk Njursjukdom: En Pilotstudie
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
20 Years - 85 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
30
Start Date
2026-04-10
Completion Date
2030-06-30
Last Updated
2026-03-27
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Healthy plant-based diet (healthy-PBD)
Healthy plant-based diet (healthy-PBD): A liberal plant-based diet that includes fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and nuts, with no specific restrictions on potassium.
Potassium-restricted plant-based diet
Potassium-restricted plant-based diet (restricted-PBD): A plant-based diet with restrictions on potassium-rich foods, which corresponds to current standard advice for patients with CKD.
Locations (1)
Karolinska Institute
Huddinge, Stockholm Län, Sweden