Kidney disease is one of the world’s most underestimated health crises.
It affects hundreds of millions of people globally, yet most patients do not even know they have it until the disease has already reached dangerous stages.
The numbers are staggering:
- 1 in 10 people worldwide live with Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
- 90% of patients remain undiagnosed until the disease is advanced
- In the US alone, over $120 billion is spent every year on unmanaged late-stage kidney care.
- A single dialysis session carries the carbon footprint of driving 240 km.
The scale of the problem is now gaining global attention. The World Health Organisation recently issued its first-ever resolution on kidney health, signalling growing urgency around prevention, early detection, and sustainable treatment.
This is exactly the conversation that World Kidney Day, a global initiative led by the International Society of Nephrology and the International Federation of Kidney Foundation, is trying to drive forward.
Observed this year on March 12, the campaign aims to put kidney health firmly on the global healthcare agenda.
The 2026 Mandate: People and the Planet
The Theme of World Kidney Day 2026 is “Kidney Health for All: Caring for people, protecting the planet.” This highlights the vital link between clinical care and environmental sustainability.
Dialysis is one of the most common treatments for advanced kidney disease. It requires:
- Large volumes of purified water
- Significant energy consumption
- Extensive use of single-use plastics
As the number of patients needing dialysis continues to grow globally, the environmental footprint of treatment is becoming harder to ignore.
This has led to growing calls for “green kidney care.” The idea is to improve kidney care while reducing the environmental cost of treatment.
Possible solutions include:
- Energy-efficient dialysis machines
- Systems that reuse or recycle dialysis water
- Reducing single-use plastics in treatment processes
- Expanding home-based dialysis options, such as peritoneal dialysis
These approaches not only reduce emissions but can also improve accessibility and patient convenience.
Early detection and healthtech innovation
Another major challenge with CKD is that it often progresses silently.
Many patients experience no symptoms in the early stages. By the time CKD is detected, kidney damage has already become severe.
Healthtech is trying to address this. Across the kidney care ecosystem, innovation is helping shift the focus from late-stage treatment to early detection and proactive management.
Some of the most promising developments include:
- AI and predictive analytics: Machine learning models can analyse patient data to identify high-risk individuals and predict avoidable acute kidney events.
- Point-of-care diagnostics: New testing strips allow clinicians to quickly detect CKD biomarkers using simple blood or urine samples.
- Digital care platforms: Cloud-based systems can automate dialysis workflows while allowing nephrologists to remotely monitor patients’ vital statistics.
- Locally developed medical hardware: Startups are developing indigenous dialysis machines to make treatment more affordable and accessible in rural or low-resource settings.
Together, these technologies are helping reshape kidney care into a more preventive, connected, and scalable system.
Startup Spotlight: Innovators transforming renal care
Strive Health
Founders: Chris Riopelle and Will Stokes
Year: 2018 | Location: Denver, Colorado, USA
Strive Health uses an AI-driven platform called CareMultiplier to identify care gaps, predict acute events, and coordinate care for patients with chronic and end-stage kidney disease.
Renalyx
Founders: Dr Shyam Vasudeva Rao
Year: 2012 | Location: Bangalore, India
Renalyx developed India’s first fully indigenous dialysis machine and launched Rx17, a dialysis system designed for rural settings. The company has also created patented point-of-care strips for early CKD detection.
Helex Bio
Founders: Poulami Chaudhuri, Rohini Kalvakuntla and Anirudh Nishtala
Year: 2021 | Location: New York City, USA
Helex is developing gene therapies for rare genetic kidney diseases, including treatments that could potentially reverse conditions like ADPKD.
Outset Medical
CEO: Leslie Trigg
Year: 2003 | Location: California, USA
Outset Medical developed Tablo, a next-generation dialysis system designed for both hospitals and home settings. The device integrates water purification and dialysis into a single platform, making dialysis simpler, more portable, and easier to deploy outside traditional dialysis centers.
Renalys Pharma
Founder: BT Slingsby and Takeshi Takahashi
Year: 2023 | Location: Tokyo, Japan
Renalys Pharma focuses on bringing innovative kidney disease treatments, including sparsentan for IgA nephropathy, to patients in Asian markets.
Invizius
Founders: Andy Herbert and Richard Boyd
Year: 2018 | Location: Edinburgh, UK
Invizius developed H-Guard, a priming solution that coats dialysis machines to prevent the patient’s blood from reacting with the equipment, reducing inflammation.
The Renal Project
Founder: Shashank Modhia
Year: 2019 | Location: Mumbai, India
The Renal Project operates micro-dialysis centres in underserved regions, improving access to affordable treatment and home dialysis solutions.
The Kidney Project
Founders: Shuvo Roy and William Fissell
Year: 2012 | Location: California, USA
The Kidney Project is developing an implantable bioartificial kidney designed to free patients from dialysis entirely. The device combines silicon filtration technology with living kidney cells to mimic natural kidney function.
What needs to happen next
On World Kidney Day 2026, healthcare leaders and innovators are focusing on several priorities:
- Integrating CKD screening into routine healthcare for high-risk populations
- Promoting the 8 Golden Rules of kidney health through public awareness campaigns
- Investing in low-resource kidney care solutions, including mobile clinics and manual dialysis technologies
- Incorporating patient voices in the design of environmentally sustainable kidney care systems

Final thoughts
World Kidney Day is more than just awareness. It’s a global call to rethink kidney care, from prevention and diagnosis to treatment and sustainability.
The future of kidney care will depend on earlier detection, AI-powered precision medicine, and environmentally responsible treatment systems.
If these innovations continue to scale, they could help build a healthcare system that is more effective, more accessible, and more sustainable for the millions of people living with kidney disease worldwide.
-By Dr Rohini Devi and the AHT Team