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April 23, 2018 –Request Funding for National Institutes of Health (NIH)

To download the official letter – click here.

April 23, 2018

 

Dear Chairman Cole, Chairman Blunt, Representative DeLauro, and Senator Murray:

 

On behalf of the undersigned organizations, representing kidney patient advocates and health professionals dedicated to improving patient care, thank you for your steadfast commitment to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and leadership, including the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK). As you draft the Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies appropriations legislation for FY 2019, we respectfully request $2.2 billion for the NIH over the enacted FY 2018 levels outlined in the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education appropriations bill, including a robust funding increase for NIDDK that is at least proportional. In addition, we urge you to consider a Special Statutory Funding Program for Kidney Research at $150 million per year over 10 years.

A January 2017 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report highlighted the pressing need for investment in kidney research; GAO found that the annual cost for care of the approximately 650,000 patients in the Medicare End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) program exceeds the budget allocation for the entire NIH ($32.8 billion vs. $31.1 billion). The equivalent of approximately just 1 percent of the annual total cost of care for kidney failure is allocated to kidney research at the NIH. Greater investment in kidney research should be an urgent priority to deliver better outcomes for patients and bring greater value to the Medicare program.

As the GAO highlighted, Congress made a commitment to treat all Americans with kidney failure through the Medicare End-Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) Program—the only health condition for which Medicare automatically provides coverage regardless of age. This unique commitment underscores the imperative for Congress to foster innovation and discovery in kidney care.

Our organizations believe the Special Statutory Funding Program for Type 1 Diabetes Research provides an ideal model to foster breakthroughs in kidney therapies and cures. This Special Diabetes Program has generated remarkable progress for diabetes patients, including the development of the Artificial Pancreas. We urge your support for an additional $150 million per year over 10 years to establish a similar program NIDDK focused kidney research—a Special Statutory Funding Program for Kidney Research—supplementing regularly appropriated funds that the NIDDK receives.

NIDDK funds the vast majority of federal research in kidney diseases, and despite the immense gap between the federal government’s expenditures on kidney care and its investment in kidney research, NIDDK-funded scientists have produced several major breakthroughs in the past several years that require further investment to stimulate therapeutic advancements. For example, geneticists focused on

the kidney have made advances in understanding the genes that cause kidney failure, and other kidney scientists have developed an innovative method to determine if new drugs cause kidney injury before giving them to patients in clinical trials. NIDDK recently launched the Kidney Precision Medicine Project that will pinpoint targets for novel therapies—setting the stage for personalized medicine in kidney care. Additional, sustained funding is needed to accelerate these and other novel opportunities to improve the care of patients with kidney disease and bring better value to the Medicare ESRD program.

Thank you again for your leadership, and for your consideration of our request. Should you have any questions or wish to discuss NIDDK or kidney research in more detail, please contact Erika Miller with the American Society of Pediatric Nephrology at (202) 484-1100 or [email protected] or Rachel Meyer with the American Society of Nephrology at (202) 640-4659 or [email protected].

Signed,

Alliance for Home Dialysis

Alport Syndrome Foundation

American Association of Kidney Patients

American Kidney Fund

American Nephrology Nurses Association

American Society of Diagnostic and Interventional Nephrology

American Society of Transplant Surgeons

American Society of Transplantation

American Society of Nephrology

American Society of Pediatric Nephrology

Atypical HUS Foundation

Baxter

DaVita, Inc.

Dialysis Clinic, Inc.

Dialysis Patient Citizens

Halpin Foundation

Home Dialyzors United

IGA Nephropathy Foundation of America

Independent Dialysis Foundation

Kidney Care Council

Kidney Care Partners

Lowe Syndrome Association

National Kidney Foundation

National Renal Administrators Association

NephCure Kidney International

Nephrology Nursing Certification Commission

Northwest Kidney Centers

NxStage

Oxalosis & Hyperoxaluria Foundation

Polycystic Kidney Disease Foundation

Renal Pathology Society

Renal Physicians Association

Renal Support Network

Satellite Healthcare, Inc.

Society for Transplant Social Workers

The Rogosin Institute

U.S. Renal Care, Inc.