Abstract

Introduction It has been proposed that a very low protein diet supplemented with keto analogues in pre-dialysis chronic kidney disease patients can slow the progression to a terminal disease and delay the start of renal replacement therapy, without a malnutrition risk. However, its common use has not yet been implemented due to the uncertainty of its efficacy and safety. Methods We searched in Epistemonikos, the largest database of systematic reviews in health, which is maintained by screening multiple information sources, including MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane, among others. We extracted data from the systematic reviews, reanalyzed data of primary studies, conducted a meta-analysis and generated a summary of findings table using the GRADE approach. Results and conclusions We identified eight systematic reviews including 14 studies overall, of which 12 were randomized trials. We concluded that a very low protein diet supplemented with keto analogues delays the progression to end-stage kidney disease, probably reduces the fall or deterioration of renal function, could reduce mortality by any cause y result in little or no difference in malnutrition risk, but the certainty of the evidence is low for these last two results.

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