4.7 Review

Chronic Kidney Disease: Strategies to Retard Progression

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms221810084

Keywords

acute kidney injury; chronic kidney disease; renal progression; therapy for renal failure

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Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is characterized by irreversible structural or functional kidney damages, increasing the risk of poor outcomes. Due to the heterogeneous origins and uncertain pathogenesis, efficacious therapies for CKD remain challenging. Therefore, prevention of CKD progression and complications, as well as controlling acute kidney injury, are crucial.
Chronic kidney disease (CKD), defined as the presence of irreversible structural or functional kidney damages, increases the risk of poor outcomes due to its association with multiple complications, including altered mineral metabolism, anemia, metabolic acidosis, and increased cardiovascular events. The mainstay of treatments for CKD lies in the prevention of the development and progression of CKD as well as its complications. Due to the heterogeneous origins and the uncertainty in the pathogenesis of CKD, efficacious therapies for CKD remain challenging. In this review, we focus on the following four themes: first, a summary of the known factors that contribute to CKD development and progression, with an emphasis on avoiding acute kidney injury (AKI); second, an etiology-based treatment strategy for retarding CKD, including the approaches for the common and under-recognized ones; and third, the recommended approaches for ameliorating CKD complications, and the final section discusses the novel agents for counteracting CKD progression.

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