| Literature DB >> 24580800 |
Ségolène Aymé1, Charlotte Rodwell.
Abstract
The European Union Committee of Experts on Rare Diseases was entrusted with aiding the European Commission in a number of tasks, ranging from the monitoring of initiatives, to recommending improvements and actions to be pursued in the future, in addition to helping strengthen liaison at both European and International levels in the field of rare diseases. The three-year mandate of the EUCERD drew to a close in July 2013 with an impressive record. The EUCERD has laid down the foundations for future work so as to continue to advance in the key areas that have been identified as of interest for the rare disease community at large: centres of expertise, European Reference Networks, patient registries and databases, newborn screening, and indicators for national rare disease plans/strategies. The work of the Committee should now be continued by the newly formed European Commission Expert Group on Rare Diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24580800 PMCID: PMC3942519 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-9-30
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Figure 1Composition of the EUCERD.
Figure 2Evolution of concepts and initiatives in the field of rare diseases in Europe.
Figure 3The EUCERD’s work process.
Key facts and state of play in European countries in December 2013: Centres of expertise for rare diseases (CE RD)1
| • | 1 European country with designated CE RD in the scope of a national plan for rare diseases |
| • | 5 European countries with officially designated CE RD |
| • | 15 European countries with non-designated CE RD acknowledged by health authorities to varying degrees |
| • | 9 European countries with CE RD recognised by reputation only |
| • | 16 European countries with plans to designate CE RD in their national plans/strategies for RD |
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| • | Consensus on 45 recommendations covering the mission and scope, criteria for designation, process of designation and evaluation, and European dimension of CE RD |
1Data as of December 2013, reproduced from S. Aymé, C. Rodwell (eds.), 2014 Report on the State of the Art of Rare Disease Activities in Europe, to be published in July 2014.
Key facts : European Reference Networks (ERNs) for rare diseases
| • | Rare diseases cited in Directive on the application of patients’ rights in cross border healthcare (2011/24/EU) (9 March 2011) as priority area for ERNs |
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| • | Consensus on 21 recommendations covering mission, vision and scope, governance, composition, funding and evaluation, and designation of ERNs for Rare Diseases |
Key facts and state of play in December 2013: Rare disease patient registration and data collection
| • | Around 640 rare disease registries in Europe1 |
| • | Majority of registries are academic |
| • | Some RD have more than one registry, many RD have no registry |
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| • | Consensus on 6 main areas : international operability, sources of data, collection of data, good practices, use of data for regulatory purposes, and sustainability |
1 Data as of December 2013 from Orphanet [http://www.orpha.net] concerning European Member States and surrounding European countries in the Orphanet Consortium.
Key facts and state of play in December 2013: The clinical added value of Orphan Medicinal Products1
| • | 1234 positive opinions for orphan product designation from 1798 applications submitted since 2000 at EU level and a total of 1219 European Commission designations |
| • | 85 orphan designated products have received marketing authorisation by end of 2013 at EU level |
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| • | Recommendation proposes four key time points for information sharing to improve the pricing and reimbursement decision process |
1Data from the report of the European Medicines Agency's Committee on Orphan Medicinal Products December 2013 [http://www.ema.europa.eu/docs/en_GB/document_library/Committee_meeting_report/2014/01/WC500159429.pdf].