Dietary vitamin E and tocopherol isoforms and incident chronic kidney disease: A 30-y follow-up study from young adulthood to midlife.

Pubmed ID: 35998793

Journal: Free radical biology & medicine

Publication Date: Sept. 1, 2022

Affiliation: Division of Nephrology, Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University, National Clinical Research Center for Kidney Disease, State Key Laboratory of Organ Failure Research, Guangdong Provincial Institute of Nephrology, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Renal Failure Research, Guangzhou Regenerative Medicine and Health Guangdong Laboratory, Guangzhou, 510515, China. Electronic address: pharmaqin@126.com.

MeSH Terms: Humans, Adult, Risk Factors, Diet, Young Adult, Follow-Up Studies, Incidence, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Renal Insufficiency, Chronic, Protein Isoforms, Tocopherols, Vitamin E, alpha-Tocopherol, beta-Tocopherol, gamma-Tocopherol

Authors: Zhang Y, Zhang Y, Yang S, Liu M, Wu Q, Ye Z, He P, Zhou C, Qin X, Gan X

Cite As: Zhang Y, Yang S, Liu M, Wu Q, Ye Z, Zhou C, He P, Zhang Y, Gan X, Qin X. Dietary vitamin E and tocopherol isoforms and incident chronic kidney disease: A 30-y follow-up study from young adulthood to midlife. Free Radic Biol Med 2022 Sep;190:284-291. Epub 2022 Aug 23.

Studies:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The relationship of dietary vitamin E intake with incident chronic kidney disease (CKD) was not clear as yet. We aimed to examine the associations of dietary total vitamin E and tocopherol isoforms intakes with incident CKD in a 30-year follow-up study from young adulthood to midlife. METHODS: A total of 4038 American adults aged 18-30 years and without reduced estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) were enrolled from Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults study. Diet was evaluated by a validated dietary-history questionnaire at baseline, and after 7 and 20 years later. The study outcome was incident CKD, defined as an eGFR&lt;60 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup> or a urinary albumin to creatinine ratio ≥30 mg/g. RESULTS: During a 30-year follow-up, 642 (15.9%) participants developed incident CKD. Overall, there was a L-shaped relationship between dietary total vitamin E intake and incident CKD (P for non-linearity&lt;0.001). When total vitamin E intake was assessed as quartiles, compared with those in the first quartile (&lt;4.35 mg α-TE/1000 kcal), the adjusted HRs (95%CI) of incident CKD for participants in the fourth quartile (≥9.61 mg α-TE/1000 kcal) was 0.55 (0.40, 0.75). Moreover, higher intakes of beta-tocopherol and gamma-tocopherol were significantly associated with a lower incident CKD. Higher intake of delta-tocopherol was significantly related to a higher incident CKD. And there was no obvious association of alpha-tocopherol intake with incident CKD. CONCLUSIONS: There were inverse associations of total vitamin E, beta-tocopherol and gamma-tocopherol intakes, a positive association of delta-tocopherol intake, and no obvious association of alpha-tocopherol intake, with incident CKD among American adults.