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

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.