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"A First-in-Human Study of Quantitative Ultrasound to Assess Transplant Kidney Fibrosis"

Published
March 20, 2025

Congratulations to Professor Kevin Parker, former ECE PhD student Dr. Jihye Baek (currently at Stanford University), and colleagues at the University of Toronto, Toronto Metropolitan University, St. Michael's Hospital Toronto, and Unity Health Toronto on publication of their article titled "A first-in-human study of quantitative ultrasound to assess transplant kidney fibrosis" in Nature MedicineThe abstract follows; more information can be found .

Abstract: Kidney transplantation is the optimal treatment for renal failure. In the United States, a biopsy at the time of organ procurement is often used to assess kidney quality to decide whether it should be used for transplant. This assessment is focused on renal fibrotic burden, because fibrosis is an important measure of irreversible kidney injury. Unfortunately, biopsy at the time of transplant is plagued by problems, including bleeding risk, inaccuracies introduced by sampling bias and rapid sample preparation, and the need for round-the-clock pathology expertise. We developed a quantitative algorithm, called renal H-scan, that can be added to standard ultrasound workflows to quickly and noninvasively measure renal fibrotic burden in preclinical animal models and human transplant kidneys. Furthermore, we provide evidence that biopsy-based fibrosis estimates, because of their highly localized nature, are inaccurate measures of whole-kidney fibrotic burden and do not associate with kidney function post-transplant. In contrast, we show that whole-kidney H-scan fibrosis estimates associate closely with post-transplant renal function. Taken together, our data suggest that the addition of H-scan to standard ultrasound workflows could provide a safe, rapid and easy-to-perform method for accurate quantification of transplant kidney fibrotic burden, and thus better prediction of post-transplant renal outcomes.