A highly diverse team imagining the undiscovered

RENAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE

Transforming
patient care
through data-driven
innovation

ABOUT THE RENAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE

The heart of RRI’s capacity for innovation is our ability to examine complex problems through multiple lenses.

The Renal Research Institute (RRI) is an internationally recognized incubator of ideas, treatment processes, and technologies to improve the lives of kidney patients. RRI’s leadership in data analytics, computational biomedicine and AI, as well as our access to a large patient population, accelerates the pace of scientific discoveries and their translation into applied medicine. Our team includes some of the brightest minds from around the world, who, along with their disciplinary expertise, bring a deep understanding of global healthcare issues and challenges.

 

Our Research

We operate at the intersection of clinical data, machine data, and real-world practice, with access to a large patient population and one of the world's largest and richest renal datasets. Our deep connection to the scientific community and to med-tech innovators gives us the rare ability to translate insight into action—quickly, precisely, and meaningfully.

 

Latest Research & News

Latest Research

  • Karin Bergling, Peter J Blankestijn

    Online hemodiafiltration (OL-HDF) and medium cut-off (MCO) dialyzers augment diffusion-based hemodialysis (HD) with convective clearance to enhance removal of middle molecules. In large-scale randomized trials, OL-HDF appears to reduce all-cause, cardiovascular, and infection related mortality compared to high-flux HD, particularly when convection volumes exceed 23 L per session. Data suggests a graded effect; higher achieved convection volumes are associated with greater benefit, and advantages are observed across analysed subgroups. Evidence also indicates better preservation of patient-reported quality of life compared to high-flux HD. Large-scale observational registry data, while subject to inherent limitations, support beneficial outcomes and generalizability to routine clinical practice. MCO membranes enhance middle-molecule clearance on conventional hemodialysis machines via enlarged pore size and internal-filtration-back filtration. However, long-term clinical data remain limited, and the convective component is not externally measured or prescribed. This perspective distils mechanistic and clinical insights on both OL-HDF and MCO HD and evaluates published evidence, including solute clearance studies, mortality outcomes and patient-reported quality-of-life data. We outline actionable prescription strategies and opportunities for individualized treatment optimization. Our goal is to provide clinicians with a concise roadmap to personalize and integrate convection-enhancing therapies in everyday practice.

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Latest News

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Education

LATEST EPISODE

Beyond the Equation | Dr. Amaka Eneanya on Kidney Function, Clinical Change, and Communication

March 2, 2026

In this episode of Frontiers in Kidney Medicine and Biointelligence, host Len Usvyat, MD, is joined by Amaka Eneanya, MD, MPH, FASN, Adjunct Professor of Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine and former Chief Transformation Officer at Emory Healthcare. Dr. Eneanya reflects on kidney function estimation, the evolution of clinical tools in nephrology, and the role of communication, patient perspectives, and digital platforms in shaping medical discourse. This episode offers an in-depth discussion on how research findings move from theory into real-world clinical practice.