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  • Renal cell carcinoma is a metabolic disease linked to a variety of alterations in genes that regulate cellular metabolism. Here, the authors examine cell-intrinsic metabolic alterations in hereditary and sporadic renal cell carcinoma, and how they can be exploited to develop novel therapeutic interventions.

    • Nathan J. Coffey
    • M. Celeste Simon
    Review Article
  • Treatment of chronic kidney disease requires a comprehensive approach including universal access to early diagnosis and to medications that can slow disease progression. Such equitable access is not only an ethical requirement but can also reduce the financial and human costs of advancing kidney and cardiovascular disease.

    • Ricardo Silvariño
    • Laura Solá
    Comment
  • Overcoming barriers to deliver high-quality care requires an assessment of the contribution of each barrier within a local context. Tools to identify early disease, knowledge of best therapies, access to care providers and medications, and an accountable and integrated health-care system are essential elements of quality care. Education of patients, providers and policy makers in conjunction with advocacy efforts and national policy frameworks are required to deliver high-quality care worldwide.

    • Adeera Levin
    Comment
  • Many countries worldwide, particularly those with low or lower-middle incomes, do not have enough nephrologists to provide health services for patients with kidney disease. Increasing training opportunities, improving job satisfaction and using new technologies and advances in artificial intelligence could help to increase the nephrology workforce and improve patient outcomes.

    • Ikechi G. Okpechi
    • Somkanya Tungsanga
    • Aminu K. Bello
    Comment
  • Here, the authors review traditional and disease-specific risk factors for vascular damage and the cellular and molecular mechanisms that drive vascular injury in systemic lupus erythematosus. They also discuss cardiovascular risk assessment, primary prevention strategies and current and future treatment approaches to cardiovascular disease in systemic lupus erythematosus.

    • William G. Ambler
    • Mariana J. Kaplan
    Review Article
  • Antibody-mediated rejection is a key mechanism in allograft loss. Here, the authors examine advances in B cell biology and how they can inform the development of new therapies to prevent or mitigate antibody-mediated rejection, with the goal of improving transplantation outcomes.

    • Peter S. Heeger
    • Maria Carrera Haro
    • Stanley Jordan
    Review Article
  • The theme of World Kidney Day 2024 is “kidney health for all — advancing equitable access to care and optimal medication practice”. To mark this event, Nature Reviews Nephrology invited five researchers from different geographical regions worldwide to discuss the impact of new and emerging therapies for diabetic kidney disease on patient care as well as the barriers that must be overcome to ensure equitable access to these therapies.

    • Ricardo Correa-Rotter
    • Louise J. Maple-Brown
    • Ifeoma I. Ulasi
    Viewpoint
  • The widespread availability of single-cell and single-nuclear genomic tools has enabled unbiased and high-dimensional assessment of tissue immunity in the kidney. The application of these technologies to human and mouse kidney samples, combined with spatial transcriptomics, has yielded unexpected insights into how resident and infiltrating immune cells maintain tissue homeostasis and drive disease.

    • Andrew P. Stewart
    • Menna R. Clatworthy
    Year in Review
  • Several successfully completed clinical trials of novel therapies in glomerular disease were reported in 2023. Building on important mechanistic discoveries about disease onset and progression over the past several years, these therapies raise hope that multiple options will be available to reduce the risk of kidney failure in glomerular disease.

    • Arpita Joshi
    • Laura H. Mariani
    Year in Review
  • Several publications from 2023 have substantiated the importance of altered NAD synthesis in kidney injury and disease progression. Now, NAD deficiency has been linked to the release of mitochondrial RNA and activation of pathways that induce inflammation. Another enzyme that governs mitochondrial function, PCK1, has also now been linked to kidney disease.

    • Thomas Verissimo
    • Sophie de Seigneux
    Year in Review
  • The next generation of artificial intelligence (AI)-enabled nephrology will leverage generalist models that link diverse multimodal patient data with the linguistic and emergent capabilities of large language models. In 2023, advances in AI that linked novel unstructured data with physiological and clinical characteristics moved the field closer to realizing this vision.

    • Benjamin Shickel
    • Azra Bihorac
    Year in Review
  • Despite the availability of effective therapies, the majority of patients with hypertension have poor blood pressure control. Key advances in 2023 have the potential to lead to better treatment adherence and control of blood pressure as well as providing new understanding of postmenopausal hypertension, which may lead to improved therapies.

    • Kate M. Denton
    Year in Review
  • Basic discovery and clinical trials in diabetic kidney disease (DKD) have continued to be reported in 2023 despite the disruption of research activity by COVID-19 in recent years. Advances in clinical trials and emerging ways to diagnose, monitor and treat DKD dominate the current literature.

    • Sarah J. Glastras
    • Carol A. Pollock
    Year in Review
  • Improved understanding of the impact of sex and gender-related factors on human health and disease and the inclusion of people of all genders in research studies is necessary to reduce health inequities and enable a more personalized approach to patient care.

    Editorial
  • Sex differences in immune cell function and immune responses affect the development and outcome of diverse diseases. Here, the authors review current understanding of sex differences in immunity. They describe the key mechanisms that mediate sex differences in immune responses and discuss the functional relevance of such differences for immune-related diseases.

    • Shannon E. Dunn
    • Whitney A. Perry
    • Sabra L. Klein
    Review Article
  • Emerging evidence suggests that cells resident within organs — both immune and parenchymal — can facilitate the instigation and propagation of tissue injury. In this Review, the authors discuss findings that suggest that kidney parenchymal cells provide structural immunity to the kidney through the regulation of immune-relevant processes, with consequences for kidney inflammation and injury.

    • George C. Tsokos
    • Afroditi Boulougoura
    • Hao Li
    Review Article