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Volume 16 Issue 11, November 2020

A focus issue on precision medicine in nephrology, with Reviews on the genetics of complex kidney diseases, integration of multi-omics approaches, digital pathology and computational image analysis, and ontologies, a Viewpoint on the patients’ perspective, plus Commentaries on diagnoses of uncertain significance, ethics of genetic testing, gene–environment interactions and kidney tissue engineering.

Image: In-depth fluorescence imaging of renal blood vessels in a mouse kidney, achieved by kidney perfusion with lectin-dye conjugates before optically clearing the tissue for deep-tissue microscopy. The rainbow colours represent the blood vessels and glomeruli at different focal depths. Cover image supplied by Chih-Yung (Daniel) Lin in the SunJin Lab and Shiue-Cheng (Tony) Tang at the Department of Medical Science, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan. Cover design: Lara Crow.

Editorial

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Comment

  • The increasing availability of sequencing has accelerated the discovery of genetic causes of kidney disease, with clear benefits for patients. However, insufficient or contradictory evidence exists for numerous variants that were previously reported to be pathogenic, calling into question some proposed gene–disease associations. Rigorous re-appraisal of evidence is needed to ensure diagnostic accuracy.

    • Daniel P. Gale
    • Andrew Mallett
    • Detlef Bockenhauer
    Comment
  • Growing genomic knowledge has provided immense insight into the aetiology and mechanisms of kidney diseases but raises ethical issues that risk the successful implementation of genomic medicine. We highlight such issues in two contexts: the return of individual genetic results from nephrology research and preimplantation genetic diagnosis for heritable kidney diseases.

    • Maya Sabatello
    • Hila Milo Rasouly
    Comment
  • New exposome-based approaches permit omic-scale characterization of the non-genetic contributors to kidney disease. High-resolution mass spectrometry analysis of plasma and urine samples captures a wide range of exogenous and endogenous metabolites that can be used in combination with genetic risk factors to identify new biomarkers of exposure and therapeutic approaches.

    • Tess V. Dupre
    • Rick G. Schnellmann
    • Gary W. Miller
    Comment
  • The drug development pipeline for kidney diseases is plagued with challenges ranging from an insufficient understanding of disease mechanisms to a lack of robust preclinical models. Bioengineering approaches have the potential to streamline preclinical drug discovery efforts and improve the success of clinical trials for kidney disease.

    • Nanditha Anandakrishnan
    • Evren U. Azeloglu
    Comment
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Viewpoint

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Reviews

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