TY - JOUR
T1 - The Future of Technology-Based Kidney Replacement Therapies
T2 - An Update on Portable, Wearable, and Implantable Artificial Kidneys
AU - Wieringa, Fokko P.
AU - Suran, Swathi
AU - Søndergaard, Henning
AU - Ash, Stephen
AU - Cummins, Cian
AU - Chaudhuri, Ashesh Ray
AU - Irmak, Tugrul
AU - Gerritsen, Karin
AU - Vollenbroek, Jeroen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Worldwide, the number of people who need lifesaving kidney replacement therapy (KRT) steadily increases, but approximately two thirds of them lack access to KRT and therefore die. Access to KRT depends on economic, social, infrastructural, ecological, and political factors. Current KRTs include kidney transplant, peritoneal dialysis, and hemodialysis. The field of xenotransplantation has been opening promising new perspectives recently but needs improvement. Unfortunately, not all patients are suitable for transplant. Peritoneal dialysis and hemodialysis will remain important KRTs, but they are expensive and strongly dependent on infrastructure, with few fundamental changes since the 1980s. The KRT field might learn from the “African mobile phone revolution” that beat infrastructural limitations, lowered costs, and increased access. We provide a nonexhaustive overview of promising ways to increase the mobility of technology-based KRTs by dialysate regeneration, chip-based nanoporous filters, bioreactor-enabling technologies, and using the gut as a “third kidney.” In 2018, the Kidney Health Initiative published a road map for innovative KRTs composed by leading innovators, but the pace of innovation is slower than was targeted. Ambitious political statements about realizing this road map can only succeed if the granted funding matches the targeted time scale. Patient-centered international “coopetition” (ie, the act of cooperation between competing entities) seems to offer the quickest pathway to success.
AB - Worldwide, the number of people who need lifesaving kidney replacement therapy (KRT) steadily increases, but approximately two thirds of them lack access to KRT and therefore die. Access to KRT depends on economic, social, infrastructural, ecological, and political factors. Current KRTs include kidney transplant, peritoneal dialysis, and hemodialysis. The field of xenotransplantation has been opening promising new perspectives recently but needs improvement. Unfortunately, not all patients are suitable for transplant. Peritoneal dialysis and hemodialysis will remain important KRTs, but they are expensive and strongly dependent on infrastructure, with few fundamental changes since the 1980s. The KRT field might learn from the “African mobile phone revolution” that beat infrastructural limitations, lowered costs, and increased access. We provide a nonexhaustive overview of promising ways to increase the mobility of technology-based KRTs by dialysate regeneration, chip-based nanoporous filters, bioreactor-enabling technologies, and using the gut as a “third kidney.” In 2018, the Kidney Health Initiative published a road map for innovative KRTs composed by leading innovators, but the pace of innovation is slower than was targeted. Ambitious political statements about realizing this road map can only succeed if the granted funding matches the targeted time scale. Patient-centered international “coopetition” (ie, the act of cooperation between competing entities) seems to offer the quickest pathway to success.
KW - Implantable
KW - Index Words
KW - Innovative kidney replacement therapies
KW - Portable
KW - Wearable
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105000390945
U2 - 10.1053/j.ajkd.2024.10.015
DO - 10.1053/j.ajkd.2024.10.015
M3 - Article
C2 - 39914734
AN - SCOPUS:105000390945
SN - 0272-6386
VL - 85
SP - 787
EP - 796
JO - American Journal of Kidney Diseases
JF - American Journal of Kidney Diseases
IS - 6
ER -