Wednesday, August 27, 2025

Stanford kidney conference, recap

 Stanford Impact Labs (SIL) reports on our recent kidney exchange conference

Global Solutions-focused Summit on Expanding Access to Kidney Transplantation held at Stanford. Physicians, scholars, healthcare practitioners, and policymakers gathered to explore research advances underway in India, Brazil, and the U.S.   by Kate Green Tripp and Marina Kaneko

 "Earlier this month, the Alliance for Paired Kidney Donation (APKD), Stanford economist Alvin E. Roth, and Stanford Impact Labs hosted the Palo Alto Summit, a two-day global convening at Stanford University dedicated to exploring challenges and advances in kidney transplantation around the world.

"On the heels of the 2025 World Transplant Congress in San Francisco, more than 30 physicians, scholars, transplant coordinators, and government officials from the U.S., India, Brazil, Italy, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and South Africa gathered to share key learnings, challenges, and advances in the field.

...

" APKD and Roth, the Craig and Susan McCaw Professor of Economics at Stanford’s School of Humanities and Sciences, have teamed up with transplant specialists in India, Brazil, and the United States to form the Extending Kidney Exchange project. 

...

"The summit’s sessions were designed to advance national efforts in KPD in India and Brazil, and deceased donor-initiated chains (DDIC); foster collaboration among leading clinical, policy, and academic partners; and identify actionable steps and shared milestones for KPD in India and Brazil, paired liver exchange in India, and DDIC in the United States. As a transplant strategy, DDIC utilizes kidneys from deceased donors to create a chain of transplants so as to maximize the use of available organs and to connect multiple recipients, especially when there are mismatches or compatibility issues.

...

"“When the very first [nonsimultaneous] chain of kidney transplants took place in 2006, it was not necessarily welcomed as an innovation,” recalls Michael Rees, a transplant surgeon at the University of Toledo and founder of the Alliance for Paired Kidney Donation (APKD). “It is incredibly exciting to reflect on the progress we’ve been able to make across the transplant community since that time, to increase the utility of a single kidney from either a living or deceased donor.”

 A group of people stands together for a photo at the Palo Alto Summit, which focuses on extending kidney exchange. The event decor features large screens displaying the summit title and theme. In the foreground, there are tables with flowers, coffee cups, and materials from the conference. The attendees are dressed in professional attire and are gathered in a well-lit indoor space.

 

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Earlier:

Thursday, August 7, 2025 Stanford conference on extending kidney exchange

 

Also of note:

Matthew Gentzkow Named Director of Stanford Impact Labs

"The economist will lead a community of social scientists who want their scholarship to improve people’s lives."

 

 

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