Sex and the kidneys: current understanding and research opportunities
医学
疾病
病理
作者
C. Noel Bairey Merz,Laura M. Dember,Julie R. Ingelfinger,Amanda J. Vinson,Joel Neugarten,Kathryn Sandberg,Jennifer C. Sullivan,Christine Maric‐Bilkan,Tracy L. Rankin,Paul L. Kimmel,Robert A. Star
Concerns regarding sex differences are increasingly pertinent in scientific and societal arenas. Although biological sex and socio-cultural gender are increasingly recognized as important modulators of renal function under physiological and pathophysiological conditions, gaps remain in our understanding of the mechanisms underlying sex differences in renal pathophysiology, disease development, progression and management. In this Perspectives article, we discuss specific opportunities for future research aimed at addressing these knowledge gaps. Such opportunities include the development of standardized core data elements and outcomes related to sex for use in clinical studies to establish a connection between sex hormones and renal disease development or progression, development of a knowledge portal to promote fundamental understanding of physiological differences between male and female kidneys in animal models and in humans, and the creation of new or the development of existing resources and datasets to make them more readily available for interrogation of sex differences. These ideas are intended to stimulate thought and interest among the renal research community as they consider sex as a biological variable in future research projects. This Perspectives article, written on behalf of the participants of the NIDDK Workshop on ‘Sex and the Kidneys’, considers opportunities for clinical, basic and translational research into sex differences in renal disease as well as the potential tools and resources needed to conduct this research.