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<article xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" dtd-version="1.0"><Article><Journal><PublisherName>yemenjmed</PublisherName><JournalTitle>Yemen Journal of Medicine</JournalTitle><PISSN>c</PISSN><EISSN>o</EISSN><Volume-Issue>Volume 5 Issue 1</Volume-Issue><IssueTopic>Multidisciplinary</IssueTopic><IssueLanguage>English</IssueLanguage><Season>January- April 2026</Season><SpecialIssue>N</SpecialIssue><SupplementaryIssue>N</SupplementaryIssue><IssueOA>Y</IssueOA><PubDate><Year>2026</Year><Month>04</Month><Day>7</Day></PubDate><ArticleType>Article</ArticleType><ArticleTitle>Blood and Urine Biomarkers for Assessing Dialysis Adequacy in Chronic and End-Stage Kidney Disease: A Systematic Review</ArticleTitle><SubTitle/><ArticleLanguage>English</ArticleLanguage><ArticleOA>Y</ArticleOA><FirstPage>0</FirstPage><LastPage>0</LastPage><AuthorList><Author><FirstName>Elmukhtar</FirstName><LastName>Habas</LastName><AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage><Affiliation/><CorrespondingAuthor>N</CorrespondingAuthor><ORCID/><FirstName>Hafedh</FirstName><LastName>Ghazouani</LastName><AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage><Affiliation/><CorrespondingAuthor>Y</CorrespondingAuthor><ORCID/><FirstName>Ala</FirstName><LastName>Habas</LastName><AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage><Affiliation/><CorrespondingAuthor>Y</CorrespondingAuthor><ORCID/><FirstName>Khaled</FirstName><LastName>Alarabi</LastName><AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage><Affiliation/><CorrespondingAuthor>Y</CorrespondingAuthor><ORCID/><FirstName>Eshrak</FirstName><LastName>Habas</LastName><AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage><Affiliation/><CorrespondingAuthor>Y</CorrespondingAuthor><ORCID/><FirstName>Amnna</FirstName><LastName>Rayani</LastName><AuthorLanguage>English</AuthorLanguage><Affiliation/><CorrespondingAuthor>Y</CorrespondingAuthor><ORCID/></Author></AuthorList><DOI>10.63475/yjm.v5i1.0283</DOI><Abstract>Background: Traditional dialysis adequacy assessment relies on urea-based kinetics, such as Kt/V, which overlooks aspects of uremic toxicity, including middle molecule buildup, inflammation, and tubular stress. Blood and urine biomarkers provide a more comprehensive and personalized approach. This systematic review evaluates their prognostic and diagnostic value for dialysis adequacy and clinical outcomes in adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD) stages 4 to 5 and end-stage kidney disease (ESKD).&#13;
Methods: Following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, we searched PubMed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science (January 2000–December 2025) for relevant studies. Two reviewers independently handled selection, extraction, and quality assessment via the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale and Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE).&#13;
Results: Of 2847 records, 48 studies (n = 41,326 patients) were included. Inflammatory biomarkers (e.g., sTNFR1, sTNFR2, CRP) were strongly associated with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality (pooled HR for sTNFR1, 1.86 [95% CI, 1.58–2.19]). Middle molecules (β2-microglobulin) and protein-bound toxins (indoxyl sulfate) are linked to mortality and cardiovascular events. Urinary tubular injury markers (NGAL, KIM-1) predicted residual kidney function (RKF) decline in hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis, for example, 25% faster RKF loss per 50% urinary KIM-1 increase over 18 months in PD cohorts, with independent prognostic value for ESKD progression. Biomarkers often added value beyond Kt/V, though assay heterogeneity, timing, and normalization hindered comparisons.&#13;
Conclusions: Blood and urine biomarkers deliver pathophysiological insights surpassing urea kinetics, promising personalized dialysis. Translation requires assay standardization, decision thresholds, and interventional trials confirming that biomarker-guided strategies improve outcomes.</Abstract><AbstractLanguage>English</AbstractLanguage><Keywords>Dialysis adequacy, hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, biomarkers, uremic toxins, systematic review, personalized medicine</Keywords><URLs><Abstract>https://yemenjmed.com/admin/abstract?id=353</Abstract></URLs><References><ReferencesarticleTitle>References</ReferencesarticleTitle><ReferencesfirstPage>16</ReferencesfirstPage><ReferenceslastPage>19</ReferenceslastPage><References/></References></Journal></Article></article>
