» Articles » PMID: 34736973

National and International Kidney Failure Registries: Characteristics, Commonalities, and Contrasts

Overview
Journal Kidney Int
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Nephrology
Date 2021 Nov 5
PMID 34736973
Citations 13
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Registries are essential for health infrastructure planning, benchmarking, continuous quality improvement, hypothesis generation, and real-world trials. To date, data from these registries have predominantly been analyzed in isolated "silos," hampering efforts to analyze "big data" at the international level, an approach that provides wide-ranging benefits, including enhanced statistical power, an ability to conduct international comparisons, and greater capacity to study rare diseases. This review serves as a valuable resource to clinicians, researchers, and policymakers, by comprehensively describing kidney failure registries active in 2021, before proposing approaches for inter-registry research under current conditions, as well as solutions to enhance global capacity for data collaboration. We identified 79 kidney-failure registries spanning 77 countries worldwide. International Society of Nephrology exemplar initiatives, including the Global Kidney Health Atlas and Sharing Expertise to support the set-up of Renal Registries (SharE-RR), continue to raise awareness regarding international healthcare disparities and support the development of universal kidney-disease registries. Current barriers to inter-registry collaboration include underrepresentation of lower-income countries, poor syntactic and semantic interoperability, absence of clear consensus guidelines for healthcare data sharing, and limited researcher incentives. This review represents a call to action for international stakeholders to enact systemic change that will harmonize the current fragmented approaches to kidney-failure registry data collection and research.

Citing Articles

Baseline Characteristics of Frailty and Disease Stage in Older People Living With CKD.

Logan B, Pascoe E, Viecelli A, Johnson D, Comans T, Hawley C Kidney Int Rep. 2025; 10(1):120-133.

PMID: 39810773 PMC: 11725818. DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2024.10.009.


Dialysis Outcomes Across Countries and Regions: A Global Perspective From the International Society of Nephrology Global Kidney Health Atlas Study.

See E, Ethier I, Cho Y, Htay H, Arruebo S, Caskey F Kidney Int Rep. 2024; 9(8):2410-2419.

PMID: 39156158 PMC: 11328589. DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2024.05.014.


International Travel for Organ Transplantation: A Survey of Professional Experiences and Attitudes Toward Data Collection and Reporting.

Irish G, Fadhil R, Rondeau E, Nagral S, Ahmadipour M, Coates P Transplant Direct. 2024; 10(7):e1655.

PMID: 38881742 PMC: 11177827. DOI: 10.1097/TXD.0000000000001655.


Global kidney health priorities-perspectives from the ISN-GKHA.

Okpechi I, Luyckx V, Tungsanga S, Ghimire A, Jha V, Johnson D Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2024; 39(11):1762-1771.

PMID: 38769588 PMC: 11648948. DOI: 10.1093/ndt/gfae116.


Capacity for the management of kidney failure in the International Society of Nephrology Oceania and South East Asia (OSEA) region: report from the 2023 ISN Global Kidney Health Atlas (ISN-GKHA).

Francis A, Wainstein M, Irish G, Abdul Hafidz M, Chen T, Cho Y Kidney Int Suppl (2011). 2024; 13(1):110-122.

PMID: 38618497 PMC: 11010617. DOI: 10.1016/j.kisu.2024.01.004.