Researchers combined results from 22 studies involving 2,879 patients with chronic kidney disease. They looked at how sodium bicarbonate, cholecalciferol (vitamin D), and protein supplementation affected muscle mass and metabolic markers. The analysis found that vitamin D was linked to better muscle mass, sodium bicarbonate was linked to higher serum albumin, and protein was linked to lower phosphorus levels. Some data suggested sodium bicarbonate might also help with blood pressure and kidney function over time.
Despite these potential benefits, the study noted that no significant differences were seen when comparing all three treatments for muscle mass or overall metabolic parameters together. Safety data indicated that protein supplementation was associated with fewer adverse events in the reviewed studies. However, the researchers did not report any serious side effects or reasons for patients stopping treatment in this specific analysis.
Readers should be cautious because the number of included studies was limited, and the sample sizes for individual treatments were small. The different ways treatments were given created substantial differences between studies. These findings are based on associations rather than proven causes. Future large-scale, rigorously designed randomized controlled trials are needed to validate these conclusions before they can change medical practice.