Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is widely recognized as a leading and growing contributor to global morbidity and mortality worldwide. Nutritional therapy is the basic treatment for metabolic control, and may contribute to nephroprotection; however, the absence of solid evidence on slowing CKD progression together with poor adherence to dietary prescription limit de facto its efficacy and prevent its more widespread use. Sodium-glucose transport protein 2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) are now considered the new standard of care in CKD; in addition, novel potassium binders, glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor antagonists (GLP1-RAs) and nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (nsMRAs) show either direct (SGLT2i, GLP1-RA, nsMRA) or indirect (potassium binders that enable the optimal use of renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system inhibitors) nephroprotective effects. These drugs could potentially lead to a more permissive diet, thereby allowing the patient to reap the benefits of this approach. In particular, SGLT2is, and to a lesser extent also GLP1-RAs and nsMRAs in patients with diabetic kidney disease, can counterbalance hyperfiltration as well as the higher protein intake often recorded in obese patients; on the other hand, potassium binders can facilitate following plant-based diets, which are considered healthy because of the high content of essential micronutrients such as antioxidant vitamins, minerals, alkalies, and fibers. In this review paper, we discuss the current pharmacological paradigm shift that places a new, broader standard of care in light of its interaction with nutritional therapy in order to optimize the global approach to patients with CKD not on dialysis.
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