Abstract

The science of kidney transplantation in children has advanced remarkably in the last 40 years [1, 2]. As kidney transplants in adult recipients were becoming more common with improving shortand long-term outcomes, results in children were lagging behind. This lag was attributed to multiple factors: greater surgical and technical problems in small children, different metabolism for needed drugs, lack of actionable scientific data, and studies with inadequate sample sizes to make definitive research conclusions, among others.

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