Comparison of diet quality tools to assess nutritional adequacy for adults living with kidney disease.

Can J Diet Pract Res

Department of Agricultural, Food & Nutritional Sciences, Li Ka Shing Centre for Health Innovation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • There isn't a specific diet quality tool recommended for adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD), making it important to evaluate how different tools assess nutrient adequacy and their relationship with potassium and phosphorus levels.
  • The study compared three dietary assessment methods: Mediterranean Diet Scores (MDS), Healthy Eating Index (HEI), and Healthy Food Diversity (HFD) using data from 50 participants with diabetes and CKD over five years.
  • This research found that MDS had a weak correlation with nutrient intake, while HFD and HEI showed moderate correlations with potassium, and HEI had a weak correlation with phosphorus; suggesting a need for a specialized renal diet quality assessment tool for better management of CKD.

Article Abstract

There is no specific diet quality tool recommended for adults living with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Identifying how diet quality tools assess nutritional adequacy and correlate with potassium and phosphorus (nutrients of interest in CKD) is warranted. Our aim was to compare Mediterranean Diet Scores (MDS), Healthy Eating Index (HEI), and Healthy Food Diversity (HFD) to determine their correlation with nutrient intake in adults living with diabetes and CKD. Using data from a longitudinal study of 50 participants with diabetes and CKD, diet quality was assessed at baseline and 1 or more times at annual visits up to 5 years (complete diet records n = 178). Diet quality was investigated for correlation with nutrient intake. Compared with HEI and HFD, MDS was poorly correlated with nutrient intake (all values <0.40). HFD and HEI were moderately correlated with potassium ( = 0.66,  < 0.01 and  = 0.57,  < 0.01, respectively). HEI was weakly correlated with phosphorus ( = 0.365,  < 0.01). MDS recommends moderation of dairy and meat, this may have specific benefits for CKD as these are both sources of phosphorus, as such high MDS were associated with lower phosphorus intake. This study suggests that development of a renal specific diet quality assessment tool may be useful; however, further studies are needed.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3148/cjdpr-2022-009DOI Listing

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