Renalytix study links KidneyIntelX testing to long-term kidney protection
Patients diagnosed with early-stage diabetic kidney disease saw measurable improvements in long-term health outcomes after using the KidneyIntelX risk assessment tool. A two-year study of 2,470 patients across two major U.S. health systems confirms that biomarker-guided treatment significantly slows disease progression and shifts patients into lower risk categories.
The research, published in the journal Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism, tracked patients at Mount Sinai Health System and Wake Forest/Atrium Health. Results indicate that the prognostic tool functions as a dynamic, longitudinal monitor rather than a static snapshot. By identifying high-risk individuals early, clinicians increased the use of guideline-directed therapies, such as SGLT2 inhibitors and GLP-1 receptor agonists, which saw usage jump to 70% among high-risk patients at Mount Sinai.
Data show that patients who received these targeted therapies were nearly twice as likely to achieve objective risk reduction. Those designated as high-risk at the start of the study were 10.4 times more likely to face kidney failure compared to low-risk peers, but the intervention group experienced a 43% improvement in the rate of eGFR decline. Furthermore, nearly 29% of retested patients successfully migrated into a lower risk category over the 24-month period, demonstrating that precision diagnostics can effectively alter the clinical trajectory of chronic kidney disease.
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