| Literature DB >> 33637194 |
Ian H de Boer1, Charles E Alpers2, Evren U Azeloglu3, Ulysses G J Balis4, Jonathan M Barasch5, Laura Barisoni6, Kristina N Blank7, Andrew S Bomback8, Keith Brown9, Pierre C Dagher10, Ashveena L Dighe11, Michael T Eadon10, Tarek M El-Achkar10, Joseph P Gaut12, Nir Hacohen13, Yongqun He14, Jeffrey B Hodgin4, Sanjay Jain15, John A Kellum16, Krzysztof Kiryluk8, Richard Knight17, Zoltan G Laszik18, Chrysta Lienczewski19, Laura H Mariani19, Robyn L McClelland7, Steven Menez20, Dennis G Moledina21, Sean D Mooney22, John F O'Toole23, Paul M Palevsky24, Chirag R Parikh20, Emilio D Poggio23, Sylvia E Rosas25, Matthew R Rosengart26, Minnie M Sarwal27, Jennifer A Schaub19, John R Sedor23, Kumar Sharma28, Becky Steck19, Robert D Toto29, Olga G Troyanskaya30, Katherine R Tuttle11, Miguel A Vazquez29, Sushrut S Waikar31, Kayleen Williams7, Francis Perry Wilson21, Kun Zhang32, Ravi Iyengar33, Matthias Kretzler34, Jonathan Himmelfarb11.
Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) and acute kidney injury (AKI) are common, heterogeneous, and morbid diseases. Mechanistic characterization of CKD and AKI in patients may facilitate a precision-medicine approach to prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. The Kidney Precision Medicine Project aims to ethically and safely obtain kidney biopsies from participants with CKD or AKI, create a reference kidney atlas, and characterize disease subgroups to stratify patients based on molecular features of disease, clinical characteristics, and associated outcomes. An additional aim is to identify critical cells, pathways, and targets for novel therapies and preventive strategies. This project is a multicenter prospective cohort study of adults with CKD or AKI who undergo a protocol kidney biopsy for research purposes. This investigation focuses on kidney diseases that are most prevalent and therefore substantially burden the public health, including CKD attributed to diabetes or hypertension and AKI attributed to ischemic and toxic injuries. Reference kidney tissues (for example, living-donor kidney biopsies) will also be evaluated. Traditional and digital pathology will be combined with transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic analysis of the kidney tissue as well as deep clinical phenotyping for supervised and unsupervised subgroup analysis and systems biology analysis. Participants will be followed prospectively for 10 years to ascertain clinical outcomes. Cell types, locations, and functions will be characterized in health and disease in an open, searchable, online kidney tissue atlas. All data from the Kidney Precision Medicine Project will be made readily available for broad use by scientists, clinicians, and patients.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; chronic kidney disease; diabetes; hypertension; precision medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 33637194 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2020.08.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612