4.6 Article

A Roadmap for Innovation to Advance Transplant Access and Outcomes: A Position Statement From the National Kidney Foundation

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES
Volume 78, Issue 3, Pages 319-332

Publisher

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2021.05.007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Kidney Foundation

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Kidney transplantation has become the optimal treatment for kidney failure, but challenges such as limited organ supply, inequitable distribution of transplant opportunities, and lifelong transplant survival persist. Future research priorities include expanding living donation, improving waitlist management, maximizing use of available deceased donor organs, and extending allograft longevity. Additional focus is needed on reducing organ discard, developing personalized immunosuppression strategies, and improving access and graft survival for children with kidney failure.
Over the past 65 years, kidney transplantation has evolved into the optimal treatment for patients with kidney failure, dramatically reducing suffering through improved survival and quality of life. However, access to transplant is still limited by organ supply, opportunities for transplant are inequitably distributed, and lifelong transplant survival remains elusive. To address these persistent needs, the National Kidney Foundation convened an expert panel to define an agenda for future research. The key priorities identified by the panel center on the needs to develop and evaluate strategies to expand living donation, improve waitlist management and transplant readiness, maximize use of available deceased donor organs, and extend allograft longevity. Strategies targeting the critical goal of decreasing organ discard that warrant research investment include educating patients and clinicians about potential benefits of accepting nonstandard organs, use of novel organ assessment technologies and real-time decision support, and approaches to preserve and resuscitate allografts before implantation. The development of personalized strategies to reduce the burden of lifelong immunosuppression and support one transplant for life was also identified as a vital priority. The panel noted the specific goal of improving transplant access and graft survival for children with kidney failure. This ambitious agenda will focus research investment to promote greater equity and efficiency in access to transplantation, and help sustain long-term benefits of the gift of life for more patients in need.

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