Kidney Research and Clinical Practice (Jun 2012)
Dietary Protein Intake and Survival in 100,088 Maintenance Hemodialysis Patients: The Role of Race and Albumin
Abstract
Decreased dietary protein intake may be associated with increased mortality risk in individuals undergoing maintenance hemodialysis (MHD). We examined 8−year all-cause mortality in 100,088 MHD patients from DaVita dialysis clinics in the US (2001–2009) and hypothesized that survival is better across higher levels of nPNA, (nPCR, a dietary protein intake surrogate) with consistent trends across race and in hypoalbuminemic patients. Time-averaged Cox models were used to estimate death hazard ratios for quarterly averaged nPNA categories controlled for case-mix, comorbidity, dialysis dose, and available markers of malnutrition-inflammation-complex syndrome (MICS). In all patients, both low (<0.6 g/kg/day, HR 1.53, [1.47–1.59]) and high nPNA (≥1.4 g/kg/day, HR 1.26, [1.19-1.34]) were associated with higher all-cause mortality when compared with the reference (1.0–<1.1 g/kg/day). This reverse–J–shape association was also found in sub-analyses performed among racial groups and in hypoalbuminemic patients (Figure). Hence, hypoalbuminemic patients of all races may benefit from higher protein intake, which needs controlled trial to verify.