| Literature DB >> 35575937 |
Adrian S Woolf1,2.
Abstract
CAKUT stands for Congenital Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract, and the acronym first appeared in a review article published in 1998. Since then, CAKUT has become a familiar term encountered in the medical literature, especially in nephrology journals. I reason that the term CAKUT was conceived as not a simple description of various diseases, but more as shorthand for a bold conceptual package that linked the occurrence of diverse types of anatomical malformations with insights from genetic and developmental biology research. Moreover, the angiotensin II receptor type 2 was seen as a paradigmatic molecule in the pathobiology of CAKUT. I contend that the acronym, while appearing as an intellectually good idea at the time it was conceived, has outlived its usefulness. To reach these conclusions, I focus on the complex of research observations that led to the theory behind CAKUT, and then question whether these scientific foundations still stand firm. In addition, it is noted that not all clinicians have adopted the acronym, and I speculate why this is the case. I proceed to demonstrate that there is an incompatibility between the semantic meaning of CAKUT and the diseases for which the term was originally conceived. Instead, I suggest the acronym UTM, standing for Urinary Tract Malformation, is a simpler and less ambiguous one to use. Finally, I contend that the continued use of the acronym is a regressive step for the disciplines of nephrology and urology, taking us back two centuries when all kidney diseases were simply called Bright's disease.Entities:
Keywords: Acronym; Bladder; Bright’s disease; Dysplasia; Gene; Kidney; Malformation; Semantics; Ureter
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35575937 PMCID: PMC9489548 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-022-05576-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.651
Reasons not to use the acronym called CAKUT
| 1. The collection of scientific bases (including a misplaced origin of the ureter bud) underpinning the CAKUT concept are too simplistic to explain the range of kidney, ureter, and bladder structural malformations encompassed by the term |
| 2. The linguistic meaning of the words that make up CAKUT show repetition (i.e. ‘kidney’ is redundant because it is part of the ‘urinary tract’), and the word ‘anomaly’ would logically include functional anomalies (e.g. congenital nephrotic syndrome) in addition to the gross structural malformations meant by the creators of the term CAKUT |
| 3. Even if we confine using the term CAKUT to structural malformations, the term transmits no precise anatomical information |
| 4. Clinicians and scientists would never accept using the mirror image term “AAKUT” (Acquired Anomalies of the Kidney and Urinary Tract) as an umbrella term for non-congenital disease, so why would they use CAKUT? |
| 5. Lumping together all congenital diseases of the kidney and lower urinary tract is akin to using the out of date term ‘Bright’s disease’, and is thus a retrograde step for our speciality |