Differences in the Food Consumption Between Kidney Stone Formers and Nonformers in the Swiss Kidney Stone Cohort.

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State: Public
Version: author
License: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_C2EAF4FBE5F1
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Differences in the Food Consumption Between Kidney Stone Formers and Nonformers in the Swiss Kidney Stone Cohort.
Journal
Journal of renal nutrition
Author(s)
Legay C., Haeusermann T., Pasquier J., Chatelan A., Fuster D.G., Dhayat N., Seeger H., Ritter A., Mohebbi N., Ernandez T., Chopard C.S., Buchkremer F., Segerer S., Wuerzner G., Ammor N., Roth B., Wagner C.A., Bonny O., Bochud M.
ISSN
1532-8503 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1051-2276
Publication state
Published
Issued date
07/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
33
Number
4
Pages
555-565
Language
english
Notes
Publication types: Journal Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Publication Status: ppublish
Abstract
Diet has a major influence on the formation and management of kidney stones. However, kidney stone formers' diet is difficult to capture in a large population. Our objective was to describe the dietary intake of kidney stone formers in Switzerland and to compare it to nonstone formers.
We used data from the Swiss Kidney Stone Cohort (n = 261), a multicentric cohort of recurrent or incident kidney stone formers with additional risk factors, and a control group of computed tomography-scan proven nonstone formers (n = 197). Dieticians conducted two consecutive 24-h dietary recalls, using structured interviews and validated software (GloboDiet). We took the mean consumption per participant of the two 24-h dietary recalls to describe the dietary intake and used two-part models to compare the two groups.
The dietary intake was overall similar between stone and nonstone formers. However, we identified that kidney stone formers had a higher probability of consuming cakes and biscuits (odds ratio (OR) [95% CI] = 1.56[1.03; 2.37]) and soft drinks (OR = 1.66[1.08; 2.55]). Kidney stone formers had a lower probability of consuming nuts and seeds (OR = 0.53[0.35; 0.82]), fresh cheese (OR = 0.54[0.30; 0.96]), teas (OR = 0.50[0.3; 0.84]), and alcoholic beverages (OR = 0.35[0.23; 0.54]), especially wine (OR = 0.42[0.27; 0.65]). Furthermore, among consumers, stone formers reported smaller quantities of vegetables (β coeff[95% CI] = - 0.23[- 0.41; - 0.06]), coffee (β coeff = - 0.21[- 0.37; - 0.05]), teas (β coeff = - 0.52[- 0.92; - 0.11]) and alcoholic beverages (β coeff = - 0.34[- 0.63; - 0.06]).
Stone formers reported lower intakes of vegetables, tea, coffee, and alcoholic beverages, more specifically wine, but reported drinking more frequently soft drinks than nonstone formers. For the other food groups, stone formers and nonformers reported similar dietary intakes. Further research is needed to better understand the links between diet and kidney stone formation and develop dietary recommendations adapted to the local settings and cultural habits.
Keywords
Humans, Coffee, Switzerland, Kidney Calculi/epidemiology, Diet, Risk Factors, Vegetables, Kidney stones, dietary assessment, nutritional epidemiology
Pubmed
Open Access
Yes
Create date
08/05/2023 11:46
Last modification date
19/07/2023 7:15
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