4.6 Article

Protein and calorie restriction may improve outcomes in living kidney donors and kidney transplant recipients

Journal

AGING-US
Volume 12, Issue 13, Pages 12441-12467

Publisher

IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
DOI: 10.18632/aging.103619

Keywords

dietary restriction; living kidney donation; kidney transplantation; kidney function; acute rejection

Funding

  1. National Institute for Public Health and the Environment
  2. Ministry of Health, Welfare and Sports of The Netherlands [S/340005]
  3. National Institute of Health (NIH)/National Institute of Ageing (NIA) [PO1 AG017242]
  4. European Research Council Advanced Grants DamAge
  5. KWO Dutch Cancer Society [5030]

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Previously, we and others showed that dietary restriction protects against renal ischemia-reperfusion injury in animals. However, clinical translation of preoperative diets is scarce, and in the setting of kidney transplantation these data are lacking. In this pilot study, we investigated the effects of five days of a preoperative protein and caloric dietary restriction (PCR) diet in living kidney donors on the perioperative effects in donors, recipients and transplanted kidneys. Thirty-five kidney donors were randomized into either the PCR, 30% calorie and 80% protein reduction, or control group without restrictions. Adherence to the diet and kidney function in donors and their kidney recipients were analyzed. Perioperative kidney biopsies were taken in a selected group of transplanted kidneys for gene expression analysis. All donors adhered to the diet. From postoperative day 2 up until month 1, kidney function of donors was significantly better in the PCR-group. PCR-donor kidney recipients showed significantly improved kidney function and lower incidence of slow graft function and acute rejection. PCR inhibited cellular immune response pathways and activated stress-resistance signaling. These observations are the first to show that preoperative dietary restriction induces postoperative recovery benefits in humans and may be beneficial in clinical settings involving ischemia-reperfusion injury.

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