Enhancing Kidney Transplantation and the Role of Xenografts: Report of a Scientific Workshop Sponsored by the National Kidney Foundation

Andrew B. Adams, Emily A. Blumberg, John S. Gill, Eliezer Katz, Tatsuo Kawai, Jesse D. Schold, Megan Sykes, Alfred Tector, David H. Sachs

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

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.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)94-101
Number of pages8
JournalAmerican Journal of Kidney Diseases
Volume84
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 National Kidney Foundation, Inc.

Keywords

  • Donor kidneys
  • end-stage kidney disease
  • xenotransplantation

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Review
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

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