| Literature DB >> 27909793 |
Martin Laimer1, Gabriela Pohla-Gubo2, Anja Diem2, Christine Prodinger2, Johann W Bauer2, Helmut Hintner2.
Abstract
Accurately addressing the diverse and complex issues of rare diseases (RD) in terms of prevention, recognition, diagnosis, treatment, care and research along key RD specificities, such as great heterogeneity, a limited number of patients, scarcity of relevant knowledge and expertise as well as enormous costs for patient care is a challenging task for healthcare providers and authorities that makes a supranational approach particularly feasible. The European Union has acknowledged RD matters by several initiatives, including efforts to implement national centres of expertise and European reference networks as well as a cross-border referral mechanism to foster access to expert services and to boost dissemination of clinical expertise and research activities. Exemplified by the EB House Austria, a centre of expertise for epidermolysis bullosa cross-linked with international reference partner institutions, this strategy proves its potential to be translated into optimized patient care and to meet the major medical, scientific, social and health-economic impact of RD.Entities:
Keywords: CLINET; EB House; Epidermolysis bullosa; European Union; Orphan diseases
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27909793 PMCID: PMC5247537 DOI: 10.1007/s00508-016-1133-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wien Klin Wochenschr ISSN: 0043-5325 Impact factor: 1.704
Core indicators for RD national plans/strategies (adopted from [7])
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| 1. | Laws or equivalent official national decisions supporting the establishment and development of a rare disease (RD) action plan or strategy; approval of RD special status |
| 2. | RD advisory committee |
| 3. | Patient representation and empowerment in action plan development, monitoring and assessment |
| 4. | Adoption of the EU definition of RD |
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| 5. | National policy to provide high-quality healthcare through establishment of CE on RD |
| 6. | Number of CE adhering to the national policy |
| 7. | Participation of CE in European reference networks |
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| 8. | National plans/strategies (NP/S) support to the development of/participation in a comprehensive national and/or regional RD information system |
| 9. | Help lines for RD |
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| 10. | RD good clinical practice guideline development and implementation |
| 11. | Standardized definition/classification and codification of RD by the healthcare system |
| 12. | Standardized registries or data collection on RD |
| 13. | RD research programs and/or projects |
| 14. | Participation in cross-border European and international research initiatives on RD |
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| 15. | Number of orphan medical products (OMP) with a European Union marketing authorization and availability in the country |
| 16. | Governmental system for compassionate use of medicinal products |
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| 17. | Programs to support the integration of RD patients in their daily life |
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| 18. | Policy to ensure long-term sustainability of the RD action plan/strategy |
| 19. | Amount of public funds allocated to the RD action plan/strategy |
| 20. | Specific public funds allocated for RD research |
| 21. | Public funds specifically allocated for RD research projects per year since the plan started |
EUCERD recommendations on quality criteria for centres of expertise (CE) for rare diseases in member states (adopted from [8])
| Good practice guidelines for diagnosis and care |
| Quality assurance and outcome measures |
| High level of expertise and experience |
| Appropriate capacity to manage RD patients and provide expert advice |
| Contribution to state of the art research |
| Capacity to participate in data collection for clinical research and public health purposes |
| Capacity to participate in clinical trials |
| Demonstration of a multidisciplinary approach (e. g. RD board) |
| Collaborations to assure the continuity of care between childhood, adolescence and adulthood as well as all stages of the disease |
| Links and collaboration with other CE at national, European and international level as well as patient organizations |
| Appropriate arrangements for referrals within individual member states and from/to other EU countries |
| Appropriate arrangements to improve the delivery of care and especially to shorten the time taken to reach a diagnosis |
| Consideration of E‑Health solutions (e. g. shared case management systems, expert systems for tele-expertise and shared repository of cases). |
Fig. 1Phenotypic spectrum of epidermolysis bullosa(EB), a group of rare genodermatoses characterized by increased skin fragility as well as characteristic mechanically inducible blisters on the skin and mucous membranes due to mutational impairment of the structural and functional integrity of intraepidermal adhesion and dermoepidermal anchorage. As the mutated genes are also expressed in other epithelialized (e.g. gastrointestinal, respiratory and urogenital tracts) or mesenchymal (skeletal muscle) organs, extracutaneous manifestations and their complications render EB a multisystem disease associated with significant morbidity and mortality. a Localized variants, such as localized EB simplex present with (sometimes quite subtle) blistering and erosions, predominantly on mechanically exposed skin, such as the hands. b Generalized blisters, erosions, and large areas of denudation are the hallmark of the most severe subtype of generalized, severe junctional EB with early lethality due to sepsis, pneumonia or laryngotracheal obstruction by scarring and/or granulation tissue. c More chronic subtypes, such as generalized recessive dystrophic EB are complicated by excessive scarring especially at acral sites, leading to pseudosyndactyly (epidermal cocooning) with skin atrophy, nail loss, and contractures. d Intraoral disease with painful blisters and strictures predispose to microstomia, tooth deformities and enamel hypoplasia as well as excessive caries in generalized, intermediate EB. e Generalized severe recessive dystrophic EB with prominent (also extracutaneous) mucous membrane involvement commonly presents with complications, such as malnutrition, dystrophy, and growth retardation f Presumably based on chronically recurrent, inflammatory tissue traumatization and permanent reactive regeneration/hyperproliferation, squamous cell carcinomas occur disproportionately frequently and early (starting even in the second decade of life) especially in chronic wounds of patients with generalized severe recessive dystrophic EB. The course is highly aggressive with early metastatic spread
Objectives and major tools of European reference networks (ERN) to be accomplished (adopted from [9])
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| Pooling of national expertise scattered throughout member states |
| (Inter-) national collaboration and interoperability between CE, other ERN, national health and social care systems/providers, diagnostic and research laboratories, patients and individual experts within and between Member States | |
| Mobility and diffusion of expertise, information, knowledge, tools as well as quality and safety benchmarks (best practice) to facilitate treatment of patients in their proximity | |
| Reinforcement of research, epidemiological surveillance and training for health care professionals as well as developments of diagnosis and treatment of RD | |
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| Databases/registries/biobanks at disposal of the international research community with application of international terminologies to support interoperability |
| Quality assurance and evaluation of performance (e. g. EuroGentest excellence network, | |
| Tools for tele-expertise (consultations, training, education) at disposal of the medical community | |
| Common guidelines/best standards of diagnosis, care, training and information | |
| European guidelines on diagnostic tests or population screening | |
| Certified medical training and pregraduate and postgraduate educational programmes in fields relevant to diagnosis and management of RD | |
| Communications infrastructure for visibility, accessibility and active recruitment of patients (Orphanet, national help lines, directories of expert services, pilot ERNs, EUCERD, information from patient organizations to assist health professionals); | |
| Sharing of Member States’ assessment reports on therapeutic or clinical value of orphan drugs at community level to minimise delays in access to orphan drugs for RD patients; | |
| Embedding of RD ERNs in the national and European healthcare systems and inter-network consortia with competitive cross-border funding to ensure sustainability |