When my daughter was diagnosed with ESRD, I spent a good deal of time trying to answer what her life will be like 20 years from now. The short term (dialysis) and medium term (transplant) are very clear, but I really want a much better answer. Here is a summary of what I came up with. I have a lot of links in my source document that are omitted here.
To put this in context, I would have thought that regenerating new organs was farther along than I now believe it is. However, at least some transplant recipients may benefit from establishing immune tolerance using bone marrow from the donor, and that is not just speculation. I'm less certain about work on the artificial implantable kidney (Shuvo Roy, UCSF). I'd like to know more about how it is progressing.
Is this reasonable? Am I missing anything? My summary:
There are two main approaches to permanent kidney replacement to eliminate reliance on scarce human organ availability and solve rejection issues:
- An implantable artificial kidney that would be much smaller than current dialysis machines and would carry out other kidney functions (renal assist device). It could be bioartificial, meaning it would have a component containing live cells. There are devices under development, but it is unclear when they will be small enough and suitable for implantation. (Clinical trials are planned in a few years, so this may become available within the next decade, assuming the trials go well.)
- A means of growing a new, fully compatible organ, preferably from the patient’s own cells. Some ideas include using a decellularized kidney (either unusable human kidney or pig kidney) as a scaffold for stem cell growth. The work in this direction looks very preliminary. It’s unclear if this can be put in clinical practice in the next two decades.
Some other developments that could help, but don’t solve the whole problem:
- Improvements in anti-rejection therapy, particularly using bone marrow (or stem cells) to establish a chimeric immune system that would tolerate new organ. Does not solve scarcity problem (does it help at all?). This has been accomplished in some cases, but it’s unclear if it is generally applicable.
- Xenotransplantation, e.g. from pigs. This has been considered for over a century but never carried out successfully. Would hypothetically solve scarcity problem. It’s unclear if this is possible at all, and if so, rejection would still need to be handled with medication.
In situ kidney regeneration:
- It’s commonly understood that once scarring occurs, the glomeruli cannot regenerate. While this is generally true, some signs of repair have been seen, at least when damage is not as severe. Could a stem cell treatment be developed that actually repairs a damaged kidney? I have no way to guess at the feasibility. From a research article: “It is unlikely than any organ-based repair process will overcome the extent of damage that is seen in a patient who has reached end-stage renal failure.” I have seen some suggestion that repair can occur but the condition of the kidney before treatment is unclear.
Incremental results in treatment:
- Mostly improvements in dialysis. Machines are getting smaller and more available for home use. The wearable artificial kidney (WAK) is a miniaturized hemodialysis machine. Significantly, it does not require a plumbing connection. While this should improve quality of life and provide benefits of continual dialysis, it does not replace all kidney function. It seems like it would also have the same risk of infection as any kind of catheter placement. This looks most suitable for adults who are not good transplant candidates or have a very long wait.