OBJECTIVE - To assess the effect of replacing red meat with chicken in the usual diet and the effect of a low-protein diet on glomerular filtration rate (GFR), urinary albumin excretion rate (UAER), and lipid levels in patients with type 2 diabetes, RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS - A randomized, crossover, controlled trial was conducted with 28 patients with type 2 diabetes (seven women mean age 58.1 years): 15 patients were normoalbuminuric (IJAER <20 μg/min), and 13 patients were microalbuminuric (UAER 20-200 μg/min). A chicken-based diet (red meat replaced with chicken) and a low-protein diet were compared with the patients' usual diet. Patients followed each diet for 4 weeks with a 4-week washout period between. GFR (Cr-51-EDTA single-injection technique), 24-h UAER (immunoturbidimetry), apolipoprotein B, total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, and triglycerides were measured after each diet, RESULTS - Normoalbuminuric and microalbuminuric patients with diabetes were analyzed separately. In normoalbuminuric patients, GFR after the chicken (101.3 +/- 22.9 ml . min(-1) . 1.73 m(-2)) and low-protein diets (93.8 +/- 20.3 ml . min(-1) . m(-2)) was lower than after the usual diet (1114 +/- 31.4 ml . min(-1) . 1.73 m(-2); P < 0.05). In microalbuminuric patients, apolipoprotein B levels were lower after the chicken (1115 +/- 36.0 mg/dl) and low-protein diets (103.5 +/- 40.1 mg/dl) than after the usual diet (134.3 +/- 30.7 mg/dl P < 0.05). Only the chicken diet reduced UAER (median 34.3 μg/min) compared with the low-protein (median 52.3 μg/min) and usual (median 63,8 μg/min) diets (P < 0.05). Glycemic control and blood pressure did not change after the diets. CONCLUSIONS - A normoproteic diet with chicken as the only source of meat may represent an alternative strategy for treatment of patients with type 2 diabetes and microalbuminuria.