1. Summary of the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Clinical Practice Guideline on the Evaluation and Management of Candidates for Kidney Transplantation
- Author
-
Valerie Rofeberg, Amy Earley, Neil S. Sheerin, Ethan M Balk, Gregory A. Knoll, Julio Pascual, Helen Pilmore, Kathryn Tinckam, David A. Axelrod, Dorry L. Segev, Steven J. Chadban, Vijah Kher, Deepali Kumar, Curie Ahn, Bethany J. Foster, Germaine Wong, Rainer Oberbauer, James R. Rodrigue, Craig E. Gordon, and Bertram L. Kasiske
- Subjects
psychosocial ,hematological disorders ,obesity ,Health Status ,compatibility ,030230 surgery ,infectious diseases ,tobacco ,bone and mineral metabolism ,0302 clinical medicine ,systematic review ,Risk Factors ,end-stage kidney disease ,Health care ,Living Donors ,Medicine ,adherence ,Kidney transplantation ,pulmonary disease ,KDIGO ,Evidence-Based Medicine ,genetic kidney disease ,neurologic disease ,HLA ,Treatment Outcome ,Systematic review ,diabetes mellitus ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,liver disease ,Risk assessment ,clinical practice guideline ,gastrointestinal disease ,immunological assessment ,cardiac disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Consensus ,Ronyons -- Malalties ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Reviews ,kidney transplantation ,mineral and bone disorder ,Risk Assessment ,albuminuria ,evidence-based recommendation ,Ronyons -- Trasplantació -- Guies ,Donor Selection ,03 medical and health sciences ,peripheral arterial disease ,CKD-MBD ,cancer ,Humans ,perioperative ,Intensive care medicine ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Guideline ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Transplant Recipients ,hematuria ,pediatric ,business ,malignancy ,Kidney disease - Abstract
The 2020 Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Clinical Practice Guideline on the Evaluation and Management of Candidates for Kidney Transplantation is intended to assist health care professionals worldwide who evaluate and manage potential candidates for deceased or living donor kidney transplantation. This guideline addresses general candidacy issues such as access to transplantation, patient demographic and health status factors, immunological and psychosocial assessment. The roles of various risk factors and comorbid conditions governing an individual's suitability for transplantation such as adherence, tobacco use, diabetes, obesity, perioperative issues, causes of kidney failure, infections, malignancy, pulmonary disease, cardiac and peripheral arterial disease, neurologic disease, gastrointestinal and liver disease, hematologic disease, and bone and mineral disorder are also addressed. This guideline provides recommendations for evaluation of individual aspects of a candidate's profile such that each risk factor and comorbidity are considered separately. The goal is to assist the clinical team to assimilate all data relevant to an individual, consider this within their local health context, and make an overall judgment on candidacy for transplantation. The guideline development process followed the Grades of Recommendation Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. Guideline recommendations are primarily based on systematic reviews of relevant studies and our assessment of the quality of that evidence. The strengths of recommendations are provided in the full report. Limitations of the evidence are discussed with differences from previous guidelines noted and suggestions for future research are also provided.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF