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Published in: BMC Nephrology 1/2022

Open Access 01-12-2022 | Chronic Kidney Disease | Research article

Ramadan fasting outcome among high-risk patients

Authors: Latifa Baynouna AlKetbi, Nico Nagelkerke, Amal AlZarouni, Mouza Al Kuwaiti, Mona Al Ghafli, Salama Al Qahtani, Bushra Al Kaabi, Mariam Al Kaabi, Ali Al Ahbabi, Yousif Al Zeyodi, Kholoud Al Ketheri, Khawla Al Nabooda, Khadija Al Tenaji, Ali AlAlawi, Hanan Abdelbaqi

Published in: BMC Nephrology | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

There is a growing literature on guidelines regarding Ramadan fasting for chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients. However, most studies only consider the impact of fasting on renal function. This study additionally aims to assess factors influencing Ramadan fasting in patients with CKD.

Method

This is a prospective before and after cohort study. CKD patients were counseled regarding fasting and followed-up post-Ramadan for renal function status, actual fasting behavior, and other relevant outcomes.

Results

Of the 360 patients who attended the pre-Ramadan consultation, 306 were reachable after Ramadan of whom 55.3% were female. Of these 306 67.1% reported that they had fasted, 4.9% had attempted to fast but stopped, and 28% did not fast at all. Of these 74 has a post-fasting kidney test. Of the patients, 68.1% had stage 3A CKD, 21.7% had stage 3B, 7.9% stage 4, and only 2% stage 5. Of those who fasted, 11.1% had a drop in Glomerular Filtration Rate (eGFR) of 20% or more. Those who did not fast (16.7%) presented a similar drop. Conversely, among the few who attempted to fast and had to stop, half showed a drop in eGFR of more than 20%. In linear regression, fasting was not associated with post-Ramadan eGFR, when controlling for age and baseline eGRF. There were 17 (5.6%) significant events, including one death. More significant events occurred among the group who fasted some of Ramadan days, 26.7% of the subjects experienced an adverse event—while 4.7% of the group who did not fast had a significant adverse event compared to 4.4% among those who fasted all Ramadan.

Conclusion

Fasting was not a significant determining factor in renal function deterioration in the study’s population, nor did it have any significant association with adverse events.
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Metadata
Title
Ramadan fasting outcome among high-risk patients
Authors
Latifa Baynouna AlKetbi
Nico Nagelkerke
Amal AlZarouni
Mouza Al Kuwaiti
Mona Al Ghafli
Salama Al Qahtani
Bushra Al Kaabi
Mariam Al Kaabi
Ali Al Ahbabi
Yousif Al Zeyodi
Kholoud Al Ketheri
Khawla Al Nabooda
Khadija Al Tenaji
Ali AlAlawi
Hanan Abdelbaqi
Publication date
01-12-2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Nephrology / Issue 1/2022
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2369
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12882-022-02915-3

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