| NIH Establishes
Rare Diseases Clinical Research Network
To address the challenges
inherent in diagnosing and treating rare diseases, the
National Institutes of Health (NIH) announced today the
establishment of the Rare Diseases Clinical Research
Network. With $51 million in grant funding over five years
from several NIH components,*
the network will consist of seven Rare Diseases Clinical
Research Centers (RDCRCs) and a Data and Technology
Coordinating Center (DTCC).
"Funding research on rare
diseases is a vital aspect of the NIH mission," said NIH
Director, Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. "By encouraging
cooperative partnerships among the investigators at these
centers, we hope to accelerate the development of
diagnostics and treatments that will benefit these important
patients."
The RDCRCs and the DTCC will be
located at the following institutions:
- Baylor College of Medicine,
Houston, TX — Rare Disease Clinical Research Center for
New Therapies and New Diagnostics — Dr. Arthur L.
Beaudet
- Boston University School of
Medicine, Boston, MA — Vasculitis Clinical Research
Network — Dr. Peter A. Merkel
- Children's Hospital Medical
Center, Cincinnati, OH — Rare Lung Diseases Clinical
Research Network — Dr. Bruce C. Trapnell
- Children's National Medical
Center, Washington, DC — Rare Diseases Clinical Research
Center for Urea Cycle Disorders — Dr. Mark L. Batshaw
- The Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, Cleveland, OH — Bone Marrow Failure Clinical
Research Center — Dr. Jaroslaw P. Maciejewski
- University of Rochester,
Rochester, NY — Nervous System Channelopathies
Pathogenesis and Treatment — Dr. Robert C. Griggs
- Weill Medical College of
Cornell University, New York, NY — The Natural History
of Rare Genetic Steroid Disorders — Dr. Maria I. New
- H. Lee Moffitt Cancer
Center and Research Institute, University of South
Florida, Tampa, FL — The Data and Technology
Coordinating Center — Dr. Jeffrey P. Krischer
Approximately 25 million people
in the United States are affected by an estimated 6,000 rare
diseases or conditions. Diseases to be studied in the
centers include: urea cycle disorders; Angelman's syndrome;
Prader-Willi syndrome; Rett syndrome; periodic paralysis;
non-dystrophic myotonic disorders; episodic ataxia; aplastic
anemia; paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria; single lineage
cytopenias, including granular lymphocyte leukemia, pure red
cell aplasia, and myelodysplastic syndromes; vasculitis
disorders; inborn defects in steroid hormone pathways;
alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency; lymphangioleiomyomatosis;
pulmonary alveolar proteinosis; and hereditary idiopathic
pulmonary fibrosis.
"Because of the small number of
affected patients in any one location, rare disease research
requires the collaboration of scientists from multiple
disciplines and the capacity to share access to
geographically distributed national research resources and
patient populations," said Judith L. Vaitukaitis, M.D.,
director of the National Center for Research Resources
(NCRR), one of the NIH funding components. "With a
collaborative approach, the network will focus on
identifying biomarkers for disease risk, disease severity
and activity, and clinical outcome, while encouraging
development of new approaches to the diagnosis, prevention,
and treatment of rare diseases."
"The network will facilitate
increased collaboration and data sharing between
investigators and patient support groups working to improve
the lives of those affected by these diseases and
potentially prevent or eliminate these diseases in the
future," said Stephen Groft, Pharm.D., director of NIH's
Office of Rare Diseases. "In addition, knowledge about rare
diseases may offer leads for scientific advancement in other
rare diseases and in more common diseases."
This network supports the
re-engineering of the clinical research enterprise component
presented recently in the "Roadmap for Medical Research" by
Dr. Zerhouni. Each research center consists of a consortium
of clinical investigators partnering with patient support
groups and institutions within and outside of the United
States that have agreed to work together studying a group of
rare diseases. In addition to fostering collaborative
research, the RDCRCs will train new investigators for the
represented rare diseases and provide content for a public
Web site on rare diseases research.
Integration of various kinds of
data including genetic, microarray, clinical, laboratory,
and imaging, is one of the goals of this informatics
approach to clinical research. The RDCRCs and their sites
will work with the DTCC in developing common data elements,
data standards, and data structures. The DTCC will
incorporate new approaches to data sharing and federated
databases at distributed sites that are scaleable or have
the potential for future expansion and adaptation. This
approach will enable researchers to integrate data with
other clinical networks, such as the National Electronic
Clinical Trials and Research (NECTAR) network.
Each RDCRC will utilize the
resources available at the General Clinical Research Centers
— 82 facilities distributed across the United States that
provide clinical investigators with specialized research
environments and specially trained research personnel.
Supported by NCRR, the facilities include nursing staff,
research subject advocates, and various core technologies,
including sophisticated laboratories, nutrition staff, and
imaging facilities.
The creation of the network
responds to the Rare Disease Act of 2002, which directed NIH
to support "regional centers of excellence for clinical
research into, training in, and demonstration of diagnostic,
prevention, control, and treatment methods for rare
diseases." The term "rare (or orphan) disease," as defined
in the Orphan Drug Act, is a condition affecting fewer than
200,000 in the United States or a disease with a greater
prevalence but for which no reasonable expectation exists
that the costs of developing or distributing a drug can be
recovered from the sale of the drug in the United States. |