罕见和未确诊的肝病:挑战和机遇。

IF 3 4区 医学 Q1 Medicine
L. Fabris, M. Strazzabosco
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引用次数: 1

摘要

根据欧洲公共卫生委员会的声明,罕见病(RDs)是一组“危及生命或慢性使人衰弱的疾病,其流行率极低,需要特别联合努力加以解决”(1)。流行病学标准对其定义至关重要。在欧洲,患病率低于1 / 2000的疾病被认为是RD,而在美国,RD的患病率低于1 / 1500,这是根据影响少于20万美国人的疾病的定义得出的。欧洲和美国之间患病率阈值的差异反映了不同司法管辖区之间的广泛差异,这取决于当前对不同国家人口规模的估计(2)。目前,约有7,000种不同的疾病被认为是“罕见的”,总共影响全球约4亿人(3)。在相当大比例的患者(近30%)中,这些疾病延续到成年期或在成年期表现出来。因此,这是一个涉及儿科医生和成人医生的医学领域,横跨所有医学和外科专业。大多数rd(约80%)是由单基因缺陷引起的。然而,受干扰的细胞内稳态反应可能激活其他疾病机制,包括自身免疫和自身炎症,对感染因子和癌症的易感性。此外,基因型和表型之间的相关性往往是可变的。事实上,在许多rd中,受影响的基因控制着基本的发育过程,导致多方面的临床表型和多器官参与。根据Orphanet数据库,大约25%的罕见患者在5岁前死亡,而另外37%的患者预期寿命缩短,这取决于RD的严重程度(4)。通常,诊断是一个很大的挑战。由于对这些疾病的认识有限,并且缺乏具有足够临床经验和实验室技能的中心,因此很难实现诊断,因此经常被延误。值得注意的是,患有罕见疾病的患者获得准确诊断的平均时间接近5年(3)。不幸的是,尽管反复不懈地付出了耗时的努力,仍有几个(6%)患者未被诊断出来(5)。即使确诊了,通常治疗方案也是有限的。尽管最近取得了进展,但据估计95%的rd仍然缺乏FDA批准的治疗方法。一种用于治疗罕见病患者的新药可能需要10-12年的时间才能获得批准(6)。这条漫长的道路也部分取决于在罕见病中进行临床试验的困难(儿童和成人中广泛分散的小队列患者,缺乏经过验证的生物标志物和合格的终点)。因此,rd也经常被称为“孤儿”,以强调缺乏有效治疗的概念,因为没有足够的研究和药物开发努力致力于这个问题。值得注意的是,只有二分之一的研发中心拥有基金会或研究支持小组,从而限制了获得资助的机会(3)。大多数研究资金被分配给最常见的疾病或作为对特定事件的反应。然而,应当指出的是,由于发现了新的细胞功能和目标,资助关于rd的研究也将有利于更普遍的疾病。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Rare and undiagnosed liver diseases: challenges and opportunities.
According to the statement of the European Commission of Public Health, rare diseases (RDs) are a group of ‘life-threatening or chronically debilitating diseases which are of such low prevalence that special combined efforts are needed to address them’ (1). Epidemiological criteria are essential for their definition. In Europe, a disease whose prevalence is lower than one in 2,000 people is considered a RD, while in the USA prevalence of a RD is less than one in 1,500 people, derived from the definition of a disease affecting fewer than 200,000 Americans. The difference in the prevalence thresholds between Europe and the USA reflects the wide variability among individual jurisdictions dependent on the current estimates of the population size in the different countries (2). At present, about 7,000 different diseases are recognized as ‘rare’, and altogether, affect about 400 million people worldwide (3). In a considerable percentage of patients (nearly 30%), the diseases prolong into the adult age or manifest in the adult age. Thus, this is a field of medicine that concerns both pediatrician and adult physicians and spans across all medical and surgical specialties. Most RDs (about 80%) are caused by monogenic defects. However, a perturbed homeostatic response of the cell may activate other disease mechanisms, including autoimmunity and autoinflammation, susceptibility to infectious agents and cancer. In addition, the correlation between genotype and phenotype is often quite variable. In fact, in a number of RDs, affected genes control fundamental development processes resulting in a multifaceted clinical phenotype and multiorgan involvement. According to the Orphanet database, about 25% of rare patients die before 5 years, whereas an additional 37% have a reduced life expectancy, variably dependent on the severity of the RD (4). Too often, the diagnosis represents a big challenge. Because of the limited awareness of these conditions and the scarcity of centers with adequate clinical experience and laboratory skills, the diagnosis is difficult to achieve and is thus often delayed. Notably, the average time for a patient with a rare disease to receive an accurate diagnosis is nearly 5 years (3). Unfortunately, despite repeated costand time-consuming efforts, several (6%) remain undiagnosed (5). Even when a diagnosis is reached, often the treatment options are limited. In spite of the recent progresses, it is estimated that 95% of RDs still lack an FDA approved treatment. It may take 10–12 years for a new drug to be approved for the cure of rare disease patients (6). This long avenue is also partly dependent on the difficulties in conducting clinical trials in rare diseases (small cohorts of widely dispersed patients in both pediatric and adult age, lack of validated biomarkers and qualified endpoints). Therefore, RDs are also often referred to as ‘orphan’ to highlight the concept that effective treatments are lacking as not enough research and drug development efforts are devoted to that problem. It is worth noting that only one in two RDs has a foundation or research support group, thereby limiting the access to grant opportunities (3). The majority of research funding is assigned to the most frequent diseases or as a reaction to particular events. It should be noted however, that funding research on RDs would also benefit the more prevalent diseases, as a result of the novel cellular functions and targets discovered.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: Translational Gastroenterology and Hepatology (Transl Gastroenterol Hepatol; TGH; Online ISSN 2415-1289) is an open-access, peer-reviewed online journal that focuses on cutting-edge findings in the field of translational research in gastroenterology and hepatology and provides current and practical information on diagnosis, prevention and clinical investigations of gastrointestinal, pancreas, gallbladder and hepatic diseases. Specific areas of interest include, but not limited to, multimodality therapy, biomarkers, imaging, biology, pathology, and technical advances related to gastrointestinal and hepatic diseases. Contributions pertinent to gastroenterology and hepatology are also included from related fields such as nutrition, surgery, public health, human genetics, basic sciences, education, sociology, and nursing.
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