Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT05090865

Dietary Potassium Liberalization in Pre-Dialysis Patients

Dietary Potassium Liberalization With Fruit and Vegetables Versus Potassium Restriction in People With Chronic Kidney Disease (DK-Lib CKD) Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Manitoba · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study will look at the impact of the potassium content in fruits and vegetables, on serum potassium concentrations in people with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) using a randomized crossover design. Participants will receive home delivery of fruit and vegetables with either higher or lower potassium content in a random order. Clinical chemistry markers from blood and urine samples, blood pressure, physical functioning and health related quality of life will be assessed throughout the duration of the trial. This study will also measure their physical functioning, using a chair stand test. The results of this study could change the dietary recommendations for people with CKD related to potassium.

Detailed description

The kidney is a primary site of potassium regulation in the body. Hyperkalemia, elevated serum potassium, occurs in approximately 10% of patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and is associated with elevated all-cause mortality. To minimize the risk of hyperkalemia, individuals with CKD are told to restrict dietary potassium. This recommendation is based on very-low quality evidence. Dietary potassium restrictions can negatively impact quality of life, and may put participants at risk of nutritional deficiencies so they should be based on good quality evidence. There is a need for high quality randomized controlled trials investigating the impact of dietary potassium modification on serum potassium concentrations in people with CKD. This trial will evaluate the impact and safety of dietary potassium liberalization using fruit and vegetables on serum potassium concentrations in people with CKD. In this 16-week study, the investigators will test if changing the amount of potassium people with CKD are eating with fruits and vegetables changes the amount of potassium in their blood. The investigators will do this by providing people with fruits and vegetables that are either high or low in potassium for a period of 6 weeks. Then these same participants will be provided with fruits and vegetables that they didn't receive in the first 6 weeks, for an additional 6 weeks in what is called a randomized crossover design. In a randomized crossover design everyone gets both treatments, but the order they get them in is chosen at random, like a coin toss. Thirty participants will be recruited to this study. The investigators will measure blood potassium during the study and see if it changes due to the change in potassium in the fruit and vegetables provided. The investigators think that changing the amount of potassium that participants eat through fruit and vegetables will not lead to a different level of potassium in the participants blood, and that having higher potassium fruit and vegetables in the diet may lead to an increase in the participants quality of life. This study's results could change the dietary recommendation given to people living CKD and potentially allow them to eat a greater variety of food.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTLiberalized dietary potassium via fruits and vegetablesOn the liberalized dietary potassium intervention, participants will receive groceries delivered to their houses that contain potassium rich fruit and vegetables, that contain more than 250 mg of potassium per typical serving. Participants will be instructed to incorporate the fruit and vegetables into their diet targeting a daily intake of 2000 mg of potassium a day from delivered fruit and vegetables, and a daily dietary potassium intake of 3500 mg.
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTStandard dietary potassium restrictionParticipants will receive weekly supplementation of lower potassium fruit and vegetables, that deliver less than 200 mg of potassium per typical serving. Participants will be instructed to incorporate the fruit and vegetables into their diet targeting a daily intake of 500 mg of K a day from the box, and a daily dietary K intake \< 2000 mg. Participants will receive counselling from a registered dietician (RD) to reinforce the potassium restriction.

Timeline

Start date
2024-01-15
Primary completion
2026-05-31
Completion
2026-05-31
First posted
2021-10-25
Last updated
2026-01-16

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05090865. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.