The TREAT-NMD Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Registries: Conception, Design, and Utilization by Industry and Academia.


Autoria(s): Bladen C.L.; Rafferty K.; Straub V.; Monges S.; Moresco A.; Dawkins H.; Roy A.; Chamova T.; Guergueltcheva V.; Korngut L.; Campbell C.; Dai Y.; Bari?ić N.; Kos T.; Brabec P.; Rahbek J.; Lahdetie J.; Tuffery-Giraud S.; Claustres M.; Leturcq F.; Ben Yaou R.; Walter M.C.; Schreiber O.; Karcagi V.; Herczegfalvi A.; Viswanathan V.; Bayat F.; de la Caridad Guerrero Sarmiento I.; Ambrosini A.; Ceradini F.; Kimura E.; van den Bergen J.C.; Rodrigues M.; Roxburgh R.; Lusakowska A.; Oliveira J.; Santos R.; Neagu E.; Butoianu N.; Artemieva S.; Rasic V.M.; Posada M.; Palau F.; Lindvall B.; Bloetzer C.; Karaduman A.; Topaloğlu H.; Inal S.; Oflazer P.; Stringer A.; Shatillo A.V.; Martin A.S.; Peay H.; Flanigan K.M.; Salgado D.; von Rekowski B.; Lynn S.; Heslop E.; Gainotti S.; Taruscio D.; Kirschner J.; Verschuuren J.; Bushby K.; Béroud C.; Lochmüller H.
Data(s)

2013

Resumo

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked genetic disease, caused by the absence of the dystrophin protein. Although many novel therapies are under development for DMD, there is currently no cure and affected individuals are often confined to a wheelchair by their teens and die in their twenties/thirties. DMD is a rare disease (prevalence <5/10,000). Even the largest countries do not have enough affected patients to rigorously assess novel therapies, unravel genetic complexities, and determine patient outcomes. TREAT-NMD is a worldwide network for neuromuscular diseases that provides an infrastructure to support the delivery of promising new therapies for patients. The harmonized implementation of national and ultimately global patient registries has been central to the success of TREAT-NMD. For the DMD registries within TREAT-NMD, individual countries have chosen to collect patient information in the form of standardized patient registries to increase the overall patient population on which clinical outcomes and new technologies can be assessed. The registries comprise more than 13,500 patients from 31 different countries. Here, we describe how the TREAT-NMD national patient registries for DMD were established. We look at their continued growth and assess how successful they have been at fostering collaboration between academia, patient organizations, and industry.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_C46527483600

isbn:1098-1004 (Electronic)

pmid:23913485

doi:10.1002/humu.22390

isiid:000325426900001

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Human Mutation, vol. 34, no. 11, pp. 1449-1457

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article