Kaitlyn Croft

Statistician

Kaitlyn Croft

Kaitlyn earned a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and physics from the University of North Georgia. After gaining work experience, she pursued a master's degree in Statistics at the University of St Andrews.

Following her studies, she joined the Royal Bank of Scotland in Edinburgh, where she worked for two years before relocating to Frankfurt. There, she joined the International Real-World Evidence team at RRI, where she has been for over four years. In the past two years, she has had the opportunity to present at the ERA conference.

Recent Articles by Kaitlyn Croft

  • Kidney international reports
    September 9, 2025
    Creating a Globally Distributed Multinational Dialysis Database - The ApolloDialDb Initiative
    Melanie Wolf, Yue Jiao, Kaitlyn Croft, Carly Hahn Contino, Justin Zimbelman, Kanti Singh, Mitesh Soni, Andrew Dickinson, Jeroen P Kooman, Dinesh Chatoth, Adrian Guinsburg, Stefano Stuard, Milind Nikam, Michelle Carver, Len Usvyat, Franklin W Maddux, Sheetal Chaudhuri, John Larkin
    RESULTSApollo captures data from January 2018 to March 2021 from 40 countries and 543,169 patients worldwide (4.6% in Asia-Pacific [AP], 13.9% in Europe, Middle East, and Africa [EMEA], 7.0% in Latin America [LA], and 74.5% in North America [NA]). It contains demographic data, 35,874,039 laboratory, and 140,016,249 treatment observations as well as frequently recorded medication information, and clinical outcomes (e.g., hospitalization and mortality). Several regional differences can be observed using these data, such as age, treatment modality, and treatment time.CONCLUSIONCreating a robust multinational dialysis database offers vast opportunities to conduct real-world research and data analytics, including the development of artificial intelligence models. These activities hold promise of advancing the understanding of kidney disease and dialysis therapies. It can serve as comparative resource for the nephrology community.INTRODUCTIONLarge amounts of data are captured during dialysis, yet multinational datasets are scarce because of challenges in harmonizing and integrating clinical data, as well as complying with data protection regulations across the world. A global kidney care provider, Fresenius Medical Care, approached this challenge and finalized the creation of an anonymized dialysis database, coined ApolloDialDb (Apollo). We report on the approach used for database creation and detail dialysis patient characteristics globally.METHODSTo create this globally distributed multinational database, data from different electronic clinical systems were extracted, covering routinely collected medical information from dialysis clinics worldwide. This data were harmonized, and then anonymized following a reidentification risk assessment conducted by the external company Privacy Analytics, Ontario, Canada. The data was consolidated and is stored in a central cloud environment and will be updated periodically.

I look forward to contributing to research that improves patient outcomes, building on my work at Renal Research Institute to bridge research with real-world impact.

Kaitlyn Croft
Statistician