Office of Rare Diseases Research, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
Chest. 2013 Jul;144(1):16-23. doi: 10.1378/chest.13-0606.
Extensive public-private partnerships, including the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the rare diseases community, which is seeing a renewed industry interest in smaller niche markets, have resulted in an increase of interventions for rare diseases. Significant collaborative efforts are required among the pharmaceutical industry, foundations, patient-advocacy groups, academic and government investigators and funding programs, regulatory scientists, and reimbursement agencies to meet the unmet diagnostic and treatment needs for approximately 25 million people in the United States with 7,000 rare diseases. The expanding role and outreach activities of patient-advocacy groups have increased public awareness. In the United States, a rare disease is defined as a disorder or condition with a prevalence of <200,000 people. In 2011, the NIH provided >$3.5 billion for rare diseases research, including $750 million for orphan product development activities, nearly 11.4% of the NIH research budget. Several research institutes and centers of the NIH, including the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, have initiated varied translational research efforts to address the absence of preclinical and clinical data required for regulatory review purposes. Clinicians can expect to see significant increases in requests from patients and their families to participate in patient registries and natural history or observational studies to gather specific information from a larger pool of patients on the progression of the disease or response to treatments. An expanding emphasis on rare diseases provides hope for the millions of patients with rare diseases.
广泛的公私合作伙伴关系,包括美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)和罕见病社区,都对较小的利基市场重新产生了行业兴趣,这导致了罕见病干预措施的增加。制药行业、基金会、患者权益组织、学术和政府研究人员和资助计划、监管科学家以及报销机构之间需要开展重大的合作努力,以满足美国约 2500 万患有 7000 种罕见病的人的未满足的诊断和治疗需求。患者权益组织的扩展角色和外展活动提高了公众意识。在美国,罕见病被定义为患病率<200,000 人的疾病或病症。2011 年,NIH 为罕见病研究提供了超过 35 亿美元的资金,其中包括 7.5 亿美元用于孤儿产品开发活动,占 NIH 研究预算的近 11.4%。NIH 的几个研究所和中心,包括国家转化医学科学中心,已经启动了各种转化研究工作,以解决监管审查所需的临床前和临床数据的缺乏。临床医生可以预期会收到患者及其家属的大量请求,要求他们参与患者登记处和自然史或观察性研究,以从更大的患者群体中收集有关疾病进展或治疗反应的具体信息。对罕见病的重视程度不断提高,为数百万罕见病患者带来了希望。