David Anderson has walked into a dialysis clinic 2,300 times since 1999. He comes four times a week for hours, while a machine does what his kidneys should: remove toxins from his blood.
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"It's a very time-consuming experience and when my treatment today is finished, I'm going to be tired. Not a whole lot will get done tonight," detailed Anderson.
Shuvo Roy, a bioengineering professor at UC San Francisco, told Ivanhoe, "Over the course of the last few years, we've advanced the membrane technology, we've developed cell engineering, and currently, we are in animal testing."
Roy is developing an implantable bio artificial kidney.
It would go in the same place as a donor kidney. Anderson's doctor, Lynda Frassetto, M.D., a professor of Medicine at UC San Francisco, said the need is critical.
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"This would allow us to build kidneys and then we could just put them in to people. Really, it would just be a totally astounding thing for us to be able to do that," said Dr. Frassetto.
Anderson agrees.
"I would participate in trials or get an artificial kidney this evening if that were available," Anderson told Ivanhoe.
The government estimates kidney failure costs Medicare more than $30 billion a year and takes up eight to nine percent of its budget. Anderson's treatment alone is close to three and a half million. Professor Roy and Dr. Frassetto said any investment in artificial kidney technology will eventually save money and lives.