Effect of food additives on hyperphosphatemia among patients with end-stage renal disease: a randomized controlled trial - PubMed (original) (raw)

Randomized Controlled Trial

. 2009 Feb 11;301(6):629-35.

doi: 10.1001/jama.2009.96.

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Randomized Controlled Trial

Effect of food additives on hyperphosphatemia among patients with end-stage renal disease: a randomized controlled trial

Catherine Sullivan et al. JAMA. 2009.

Abstract

Context: High dietary phosphorus intake has deleterious consequences for renal patients and is possibly harmful for the general public as well. To prevent hyperphosphatemia, patients with end-stage renal disease limit their intake of foods that are naturally high in phosphorus. However, phosphorus-containing additives are increasingly being added to processed and fast foods. The effect of such additives on serum phosphorus levels is unclear.

Objective: To determine the effect of limiting the intake of phosphorus-containing food additives on serum phosphorus levels among patients with end-stage renal disease.

Design, setting, and participants: Cluster randomized controlled trial at 14 long-term hemodialysis facilities in northeast Ohio. Two hundred seventy-nine patients with elevated baseline serum phosphorus levels (>5.5 mg/dL) were recruited between May and October 2007. Two shifts at each of 12 large facilities and 1 shift at each of 2 small facilities were randomly assigned to an intervention or control group.

Intervention: Intervention participants (n=145) received education on avoiding foods with phosphorus additives when purchasing groceries or visiting fast food restaurants. Control participants (n=134) continued to receive usual care.

Main outcome measure: Change in serum phosphorus level after 3 months.

Results: At baseline, there was no significant difference in serum phosphorus levels between the 2 groups. After 3 months, the decline in serum phosphorus levels was 0.6 mg/dL larger among intervention vs control participants (95% confidence interval, -1.0 to -0.1 mg/dL). Intervention participants also had statistically significant increases in reading ingredient lists (P<.001) and nutrition facts labels (P = .04) but no significant increase in food knowledge scores (P = .13).

Conclusion: Educating end-stage renal disease patients to avoid phosphorus-containing food additives resulted in modest improvements in hyperphosphatemia.

Trial registration: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00583570.

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