Physical exercise reduces all-cause mortality and improves outcomes in chronic kidney disease patients.
This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated 82 randomized controlled trials involving patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), encompassing both dialysis-dependent and non-dialysis populations. The primary objective was to assess the impact of physical exercise on all-cause mortality, while secondary outcomes included cardiovascular, pulmonary, and renal function, as well as inflammatory and laboratory indices.
The meta-analysis demonstrated that physical exercise was associated with significantly reduced all-cause mortality. Beyond mortality, exercise interventions led to improved cardiovascular function, blood pressure, and pulmonary function. In dialysis patients, exercise increased dialysis adequacy and preserved residual renal function. Additionally, inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein and interleukin-6 decreased, while hemoglobin and albumin levels increased. In non-dialysis patients, physical exercise was associated with decreased fat mass.
Safety data, including adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, and tolerability, were not reported in the included studies. A key limitation identified was the lack of a comprehensive summary of existing literature, particularly regarding results from randomized controlled trials. Funding sources and conflicts of interest were not reported.
The practice relevance indicates that physical exercise is beneficial for CKD patients regardless of the mode or location of exercise. While the evidence suggests physical exercise can significantly reduce all-cause mortality, particularly in dialysis-dependent patients, clinicians should interpret these findings within the context of the study limitations and the absence of reported safety data.