“…These initial studies indicated that (i) exercise-based prehabilitation is safe, (ii) kidney transplant candidates consider exercise-based prehabilitation appropriate, acceptable, satisfying, and effective to improve physical function, and (iii) exercise-based prehabilitation improves physical function, cardiorespiratory fitness, muscle strength, physical activity levels, fatigue, frailty, body composition, and postoperative length of stay [28–31]. Recently, a consensus meeting on prehabilitation for solid organ transplant candidates was held under the flag of the European Society of Organ Transplantation (ESOT) [32 ▪ ]. Recommendations from this meeting stated that given the limited body of literature evidence, high-quality studies on prehabilitation in solid organ transplant candidates are needed, in which both the effectiveness and implementation of pretransplant multimodal prehabilitation are addressed.…”