Literature DB >> 29776250

Towards a framework for personalized healthcare: lessons learned from the field of rare diseases.

Erik Tambuyzer1.   

Abstract

A large percentage of medicines do not work for the patient populations they are intended to treat. Increased knowledge regarding genomics and the underlying biological mechanism of diseases should help us be able to stratify patients into groups of likely responders and nonresponders, and to identify those patients for whom a treatment might do more harm than good. This article sets out different policy perspectives for the healthcare systems, and draws in on 25 years of particular experience from the rare disease and orphan drug field, to illuminate the pathway forward in relation to key implementation aspects of personalized healthcare. In principle, we submit that targeting medicines to preidentified groups for whom we can predict a beneficial outcome is a good thing for everyone - first of all for the patients, but also for all the other stakeholders, including payers, treating physicians and industry - because it has the potential to create sustainable and functioning healthcare systems directed to better health and prevention of disease. Personalized healthcare over time could also lead to shorter drug-development times because of lower rates of failure in late-stage drug development. Using orphan medicines to treat well-diagnosed patients suffering from a life-threatening or seriously debilitating rare disease, is an attempt to work according to these principles. As there is much that needs to be done to turn the promise into reality, we need to identify the barriers and challenges to transform the potential opportunities into real-life benefits, and what needs to be done in order to overcome them. Learning from the field of rare diseases and orphan drugs may provide, perhaps unexpectedly, some of the answers to public policy questions related to future (personalized) healthcare, but of course not all aspects, are common between the two fields.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biomarkers; business models; diagnostic testing; education; ethics; incentives; multistakeholder collaboration; orphan drugs; patients outcomes; personalized healthcare; pharmacogenomics; rare diseases; registries; regulatory framework

Year:  2010        PMID: 29776250     DOI: 10.2217/pme.10.52

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Per Med        ISSN: 1741-0541            Impact factor:   2.512


  2 in total

1.  Orthopaedic phenotyping of NGLY1 deficiency using an international, family-led disease registry.

Authors:  Eli M Cahan; Steven L Frick
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2019-06-19       Impact factor: 4.123

2.  Pathway Maps of Orphan and Complex Diseases Using an Integrative Computational Approach.

Authors:  Kais Ghedira; Soumaya Kouidhi; Yosr Hamdi; Houcemeddine Othman; Sonia Kechaou; Sadri Znaidi; Sghaier Haïtham; Imen Rabhi
Journal:  Biomed Res Int       Date:  2020-11-27       Impact factor: 3.411

  2 in total

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