Overcoming Barriers in Kidney Health-Forging a Platform for Innovation

Innovation in kidney diseases is not commensurate with the effect of these diseases on human health and mortality or innovation in other key therapeutic areas. A primary cause of the dearth in innovation is that kidney diseases disproportionately affect a demographic that is largely disenfranchised,...

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Published in:Journal of the American Society of Nephrology Vol. 27; no. 7; pp. 1902 - 1910
Main Authors: Linde, Peter G, Archdeacon, Patrick, Breyer, Matthew D, Ibrahim, Tod, Inrig, Jula K, Kewalramani, Reshma, Lee, Celeste Castillo, Neuland, Carolyn Y, Roy-Chaudhury, Prabir, Sloand, James A, Meyer, Rachel, Smith, Kimberly A, Snook, Jennifer, West, Melissa, Falk, Ronald J
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States American Society of Nephrology 01-07-2016
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Summary:Innovation in kidney diseases is not commensurate with the effect of these diseases on human health and mortality or innovation in other key therapeutic areas. A primary cause of the dearth in innovation is that kidney diseases disproportionately affect a demographic that is largely disenfranchised, lacking sufficient advocacy, public attention, and funding. A secondary and likely consequent cause is that the existing infrastructure supporting nephrology research pales in comparison with those for other internal medicine specialties, especially cardiology and oncology. Citing such inequities, however, is not enough. Changing the status quo will require a coordinated effort to identify and redress the existing deficits. Specifically, these deficits relate to the need to further develop and improve the following: understanding of the disease mechanisms and pathophysiology, patient engagement and activism, clinical trial infrastructure, and investigational clinical trial designs as well as coordinated efforts among critical stakeholders. This paper identifies potential solutions to these barriers, some of which are already underway through the Kidney Health Initiative. The Kidney Health Initiative is unique and will serve as a current and future platform from which to overcome these barriers to innovation in nephrology.
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Present address: Dr. Kimberly A. Smith, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, US Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland.
ISSN:1046-6673
1533-3450
DOI:10.1681/ASN.2015090976