Department of Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Castleman Disease Collaborative Network, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Cell Rep Med. 2020 Dec 22;1(9):100158. doi: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2020.100158.
Geographically dispersed patients, inconsistent treatment tracking, and limited infrastructure slow research for many orphan diseases. We assess the feasibility of a patient-powered study design to overcome these challenges for Castleman disease, a rare hematologic disorder. Here, we report initial results from the ACCELERATE natural history registry. ACCELERATE includes a traditional physician-reported arm and a patient-powered arm, which enables patients to directly contribute medical data and biospecimens. This study design enables successful enrollment, with the 5-year minimum enrollment goal being met in 2 years. A median of 683 clinical, laboratory, and imaging data elements are captured per patient in the patient-powered arm compared with 37 in the physician-reported arm. These data reveal subgrouping characteristics, identify off-label treatments, support treatment guidelines, and are used in 17 clinical and translational studies. This feasibility study demonstrates that the direct-to-patient design is effective for collecting natural history data and biospecimens, tracking therapies, and providing critical research infrastructure.
地理上分散的患者、治疗情况的不一致监测,以及基础设施有限,这些都使得许多孤儿病的研究进展缓慢。我们评估了一种以患者为中心的研究设计用于克服卡斯特曼病(一种罕见的血液疾病)研究中这些挑战的可行性。在此,我们报告了 ACCELERATE 自然史登记研究的初步结果。ACCELERATE 包括一个传统的医生报告臂和一个以患者为中心的臂,它使患者能够直接提供医疗数据和生物样本。这种研究设计实现了成功入组,5 年的最小入组目标在 2 年内就达到了。与医生报告臂相比,在以患者为中心的臂中,每位患者平均捕获 683 项临床、实验室和影像学数据元素,而在医生报告臂中只有 37 项。这些数据揭示了分组特征,确定了超说明书治疗方法,支持治疗指南,并用于 17 项临床和转化研究。这项可行性研究表明,直接面向患者的设计在收集自然史数据和生物样本、跟踪治疗方法以及提供关键研究基础设施方面是有效的。