Nutrition & Diabetes (Aug 2024)
Identification of interactions between genetic risk scores and dietary patterns for personalized prevention of kidney dysfunction in a population-based cohort
Abstract
Abstract Background & Aim Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a heterogeneous disorder that affects the kidney structure and function. This study investigated the effect of the interaction between genetic factors and dietary pattern on kidney dysfunction in Korean adults. Methods Baseline data were obtained from the Ansan and Ansung Study of the Korean Genome and Epidemiology Study involving 8230 participants aged 40–69 years. Kidney dysfunction was defined as an estimated glomerular filtration rate 0, while the high-GR group had GRS ≤ 0. Results Three distinct dietary patterns were extracted, namely, the “prudent pattern,” “flour-based and animal food pattern,” and “white rice pattern,” to analyze the effect of dietary pattern on kidney function. In the “flour-based and animal food pattern,” higher pattern scores were associated with a higher prevalence of kidney dysfunction in both the low and high GR groups (P for trend < 0.0001 in the low-, high-GR groups of model 1; 0.0050 and 0.0065 in the low-, high-GR groups of model 2, respectively). Conclusions The results highlight a significant association between the ‘flour-based and animal food pattern’ and higher kidney dysfunction prevalence in individuals with both low and high GR. These findings suggest that personalized nutritional interventions based on GR profiles may become the basis for presenting GR-based individual dietary patterns for kidney dysfunction.