TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing Kidney Transplantation and the Role of Xenografts
T2 - Report of a Scientific Workshop Sponsored by the National Kidney Foundation
AU - Adams, Andrew B.
AU - Blumberg, Emily A.
AU - Gill, John S.
AU - Katz, Eliezer
AU - Kawai, Tatsuo
AU - Schold, Jesse D.
AU - Sykes, Megan
AU - Tector, Alfred
AU - Sachs, David H.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 National Kidney Foundation, Inc.
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - Chronic kidney disease affects an estimated 37 million people in the United States; of these, >800,000 have end-stage renal disease requiring chronic dialysis or a kidney transplant to survive. Despite efforts to increase the donor kidney supply, approximately 100,000 people are registered on the kidney transplant wait-list with no measurable decrease over the past 2 decades. The outcomes of kidney transplantation are significantly better than for chronic dialysis: kidney transplant recipients have lower rates of mortality and cardiovascular events and better quality of life, but wait-list time matters. Time on dialysis waiting for a deceased-donor kidney is a strong independent risk factor for outcomes after a kidney transplant. Deceased-donor recipients with wait-list times on dialysis of <6 months have graft survival rates equivalent to living-donor recipients with waitlist times on dialysis of >2 years. In 2021, >12,000 people had been on the kidney transplant waitlist for ≥5 years. As the gap between the demand for and availability of donor kidneys for allotransplantation continues to widen, alternative strategies are needed to provide a stable, sufficient, and timely supply. A strategy that is gaining momentum toward clinical application is pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation. This report summarizes the proceedings of a meeting convened on April 11-12, 2022, by the National Kidney Foundation to review and assess the state of pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation as a potential cure for end-stage renal disease.
AB - Chronic kidney disease affects an estimated 37 million people in the United States; of these, >800,000 have end-stage renal disease requiring chronic dialysis or a kidney transplant to survive. Despite efforts to increase the donor kidney supply, approximately 100,000 people are registered on the kidney transplant wait-list with no measurable decrease over the past 2 decades. The outcomes of kidney transplantation are significantly better than for chronic dialysis: kidney transplant recipients have lower rates of mortality and cardiovascular events and better quality of life, but wait-list time matters. Time on dialysis waiting for a deceased-donor kidney is a strong independent risk factor for outcomes after a kidney transplant. Deceased-donor recipients with wait-list times on dialysis of <6 months have graft survival rates equivalent to living-donor recipients with waitlist times on dialysis of >2 years. In 2021, >12,000 people had been on the kidney transplant waitlist for ≥5 years. As the gap between the demand for and availability of donor kidneys for allotransplantation continues to widen, alternative strategies are needed to provide a stable, sufficient, and timely supply. A strategy that is gaining momentum toward clinical application is pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation. This report summarizes the proceedings of a meeting convened on April 11-12, 2022, by the National Kidney Foundation to review and assess the state of pig-to-human kidney xenotransplantation as a potential cure for end-stage renal disease.
KW - Donor kidneys
KW - end-stage kidney disease
KW - xenotransplantation
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U2 - 10.1053/j.ajkd.2023.12.025
DO - 10.1053/j.ajkd.2023.12.025
M3 - Article
C2 - 38452918
AN - SCOPUS:85189945327
SN - 0272-6386
VL - 84
SP - 94
EP - 101
JO - American Journal of Kidney Diseases
JF - American Journal of Kidney Diseases
IS - 1
ER -