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Stories from the dialysis comunity across the globe.



Kidneys Go Social With Renal Support Network's Kidney Disease Awareness ... - PR Newswire (press release) PDF Print
GLENDALE, Calif., March 3, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Renal Support Network (RSN) launches Kidneys Go Social, a new kidney disease awareness campaign timed with National Kidney Month in March. RSN will encourage social media posts about an often silent disease affecting people.  Kidneys filter 200 liters of blood a day and helps regulate blood pressure. Kidneys are also prone to disease with more than 1 in 10 Americans at risk due to diabetes, genetic illnesses, high blood pressure or family history of kidney failure. People often do not know that they have kidney disease until it is in the final stages; right now more than 450,000 people in the U.S. are on dialysis, and almost 100,000 are waiting for a kidney transplant. Through Kidneys Go Social, RSN will be challenging audiences to become more aware of kidneys' functions and importance. If your kidneys could talk, what would they say?  What would they tell us? How would they let us know what they need? How do they feel when things are going well or not so well? How are your kidneys inspired? Send us your interpretation, from the viewpoint of your talking kidneys, in video, pictures, drawings, stories, or poems. Sing a song, put on a puppet show, or whatever your kidneys can dream up that can be posted on your own social media platform with #kidneytalk and Twitter handle @rsnhope so we can find your story.  The campaign will promote social posts, discussions, and sharing about kidney disease, risk factors, early detection, and the life-saving benefits of organ donation for both children and adults, RSN is challenging the community to share stories, and connect with others. "Challenge a friend to tell the world what their kidneys would say," the campaign will urge. "If they'd rather not post, ask them instead to donate to Renal Support Network!" Donations raised through the campaign will be used to fund RSN's Annual Renal Teen Prom and educational activities. To learn more, visitwww.RSNhope.org

About RSN
RSN is a nonprofit, patient-focused, patient-run organization that instills health, happiness, and hope into the lives of those affected by the disease. Founded in 1993 by Lori Hartwell, who developed chronic kidney disease at the age of 2, RSN strives to motivate and assist patients in developing their personal coping skills, special talents, and employability by educating and empowering them.

 

SOURCE Renal Support Network

RELATED LINKS
http://rsnhope.org

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PSN recommends more CAPD for renal failure patients - The Nation PDF Print

Islamabad - Speakers at the concluding session of the 10th Biennial Pakistan Society of Nephrology (PSN) International Conference have emphasised the need for doing more CAPD (continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis) in chronic kidney failure patients.

The conference  was organised by Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Medical University (SZABMU), Pakistan institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS), Islamabad, under the guidance of ex-head of department PIMS Nephrology Department and twice past president of PSN, Professor Sameeh Javed Khan and current acting head of department and Associate Professor of Nephrology, PIMS, Dr Mohammad Imtiaz Masroor and Assistant Professor Nephrology PIMS, Dr Syed Sohail Tanveer, in collaboration with all local chapter nephrologists of Islamabad and Rawalpindi and armed forces institutes.

The conference was inaugurated by Prof Jaffar Naqvi.
Prof Javed Akram, Vice-Chancellor Shaheed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto Medical University, PIMS, was the guest of honour.

The theme of the conference was, “Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) Challenges in South Asia,” and keeping the theme in mind world renowned specialists of the field nationally and internationally participated in this mega event with zeal.
Speakers from most of south Asian countries like Prof George Abraham from India, Prof Rezvi Sherif from Sri Lanka, Dr Dhiraj Manandher from Nepal and other international speakers like Prof Lionel Rostaing from France and Dr Joen Kye Hwang from South Korea, delivered state-of-the-art lectures, where they highlighted the challenges of CKD as well as guidelines and recommendation for deceased organ donor/cadaveric renal transplant, and emphasised at the need of doing more CAPD (continuous amubulatory peritoneal dialysis) in chronic kidney failure patients.

This three days conference was preceded by a two days extensive pre-conference post graduate trainees  course that had the record breaking attendance ever in any course conducted by the society.

At the end there was an election and selection of the new office bearers and the new members of PSN were declared.
New president being Prof Nisar Anwar from Khyber Teaching Hospital, Peshawar, vice president, Dr.
Mohammad Imtiaz Masroor from Shaheed Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto Medical University (SZABMU), PIMS, Islamabad, and general secretary, Prof Waqar Ahmed, from Shiekh Zayad Hospital, Lahore.

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Renal Cell Cancer: Keynote Lecture From GU Symposium 2015 - Cancer Therapy Advisor PDF Print

More than 3,700 papers on kidney cancer were published in 2014 but none offered major changes in the therapeutic landscape for metastatic renal cell cancers (mRCCs), reported Toni K. Choueiri, MD, Director of the Kidney Cancer Center, and Clinical Director of The Lank Center for Genitourinary Oncology at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, MA.

“If you look at the NCCN guidelines that were just updated, version 3.2015, there is not a major change,” he said.1 “But there are a lot of trials that provide important insights for future trials and management of patients.”

Dr. Choueiri delivered the 2014 Year in Review research retrospective at the 2015 Genitourinary Cancers Symposium.

Among advances he reviewed were clinical trials comparing approved targeted agents, health outcomes research, and biomarkers. “A lot of work also remains to be done in non-clear cell RCC,” he emphasized.

Comparing Approved Targeted Therapies

Dr. Choueiri reviewed three important papers from 2014 that compared approved targeted agents: an updated report on overall survival from the COMPARZ trial,2 comparing sunitinib versus pazopanib in patients previously untreated; the INTORSECT trial comparing temsirolimus versus sorafenib after sunitinib therapy3; and RECORD-3, a clinical trial comparing sunitinib versus everolimus.4

“There was an updated report from the COMPARZ trial that showed pazopanib is not inferior to sunitinib in the front-line setting,” Dr. Choueiri said. “Why is this important? Because it provides a benchmark for future trials of single-agent, targeted therapy that utilize pazopanib or sunitinib as a control arm.”

Another extremely important trial published in 2014 was the INTORSECT trial, Dr. Choueiri said. “As we know, second-line agents after progression of [vascular endothelial growth factor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (VEGF TKIs)] is an open field.”

Progression-free survival (PFS) was this INTORSECT study's primary endpoint, and median PFS did not vary significantly between temsirolimus and sorafenib, he noted.

RELATED: Body Mass Index Predicts Survival in Metastatic Clear Cell Renal Cell Carcinoma

“But to our surprise in the RCC community, the secondary endpoint—overall survival—did favor sorafenib,” Dr. Choueiri said. “I'm personally still puzzled by that result. It could be that sorafenib results in higher survival,” but uncertainties remain, he said.

“If you dig and look at patient characteristics, [overall survival] was not different between the study arms. If you look at receipt of third-line therapy after progression, it's not different. If we look at the patient that came off therapy because of treatment discontinuation, it's not different. This is important to remember.”

Finally, the phase 2 RECORD-3 study tested the standard sequence of sunitinib followed by everolimus. And everolimus followed by sunitinib. The data show that everolimus first is inferior to the standard (sunitinib first) treatment sequence.

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Urine test predicts heart failure patients' risk of acute kidney injury - NephrologyNews.com PDF Print

Levels of a protein in the urine may help clinicians predict which patients with acute heart failure are at increased risk of developing kidney injury during hospitalization, according to a study conducted by  Xiaobing Yang, MD, Fan Fan Hou, MD, PhD,  and colleagues from Southern Medical University in Guangzhou, China. The study, entitled "Urinary Angiotensinogen Level Predicts AKI in Acute Decompensated Heart Failure: A Prospective, Two-Stage Study," appears in an upcoming issue of the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology .

In patients with acute decompensated heart failure (ADHF), which occurs when symptoms in people with previous or existing heart problems get worse, 25% to 51% develop acute kidney injury. Unfortunately, there are no reliable clinical markers to help clinicians predict which patients are at high risk of developing AKI.

Xiaobing Yang, MD, Fan Fan Hou, MD, PhD, from Southern Medical University, in Guangzhou, China, and their colleagues conducted a study in 436 patients with ADHF to validate a new marker, urinary angiotensinogen (uAGT), for predicting patients' risk of developing AKI. uAGT plays an important role in blood pressure regulation and kidney health.

The team demonstrated that uAGT levels at the time of hospital admission predicted AKI risk with considerable accuracy. The highest quartile of uAGT on admission was linked with a 50-times increased risk of AKI compared with the lowest quartile. Patients' uAGT level at the time of admission also helped clinicians predict patients' risk of being rehospitalized or dying within one year.

"Our results raise the possibility that by using sensitive and specific biomarkers such as uAGT, clinicians may be able to identify ADHF patients at high risk of developing AKI as early as on the first day of admission," said Hou. "If confirmed, uAGT levels on the first day of admission may improve clinicians' ability to assess ADHF patients' risk of developing AKI and to predict their 1-year prognosis, which in turn would help clinicians to plan and initiate the most appropriate management strategies during hospitalization and post discharge."

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Wenlock Hospital to be equipped with dialysis facilities soon - Daijiworld.com PDF Print
Daijiworld.com
He visited Wenlock Hospital on Tuesday, March 3 and inspected the work of the dialysis centre. He said that the centre will be a model in the state. A ventilator has already been installed and beds are brought in. The remaining components will arrive

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