Guest guest Posted May 22, 2008 Report Share Posted May 22, 2008 New Program to Help Rare Disease Patients, Science _http://www.macroworldinvestor.com/m/m.w?lp=GetStory & id=307143101_ (http://www.macroworldinvestor.com/m/m.w?lp=GetStory & id=307143101) (mcsafeeds/message/2628;_ylc=X3oDMTJya3NqZnU3BF9TA\ zk3MzU5NzE1BGdycElk AzIxMjQxNDQ3BGdycHNwSWQDMTcwODM4ODM2MgRtc2dJZAMyNjI4BHNlYwNkbXNnBHNsawN2bXNnBH N0aW1lAzEyMTEzNzA2MzA-) NIH's Department of Mysteries Three parts of the National Institutes of Health - the National Institute of Human Genome Research, the NIH Office of Rare Diseases and the NIH Clinical Center - are embarking on a joint venture that aims to diagnose patients with ailments that have flummoxed their physicians and eluded diagnosis. NIH Director Elias Zerhouni told reporters at a press conference that the initiative, which officially is called the Undiagnosed Diseases Program, aims to benefit patients and basic research alike: " We believe that there is not only a service to be rendered, but also knowledge to be gained. " The NIH already has a mechanism in place for trying to help patients with elusive diagnoses, but the new program will be more comprehensive. Currently, Zerhouni explains, " if a patient calls in, they are triaged to a specific protocol " of one of the NIH teams studying specific rare diseases. In the new program, specialists from more than two dozen fields - including obvious ones like neurology, immunology and hematology, but also perhaps more surprising ones like mental and dental health - will review each case. Zerhouni said that recent technology advantages have meant that the time is ripe for a large-scale attempt at undiagnosed diseases. " That bridge couldn't be crossed 10 or 15 years ago, because we didn't have the tools, " he said. In the era of genomics and proteomics, the problem has shifted. Now the tools are there, but in the short term that also has meant that " we have many markers that have been discovered, the significance of which is not always clear, " Zerhouni said. William Gahl, clinical director at the National Human Genome Research Institute, added that the program " doesn't just go one way - that is, research to translational and patient care - it also goes the opposite way, with patients being seen enlightening us with respect to what the basic defect is and what's going on in terms of the physiology and cell biology. " An excellent case in point was the disease history of Amanda Young, a patient who was diagnosed by a physician in the NIH Clinical Center. Young is extremely susceptible to life-threatening infections, for reasons that baffled the doctors who saw her. " Even after years of trying, no one could give me a name, or a reason, why my life was threatened again and again, " she told reporters at the press briefing. At the NIH Clinical Center, Young ultimately was diagnosed with a mutation in the IRAK4 gene, which ultimately led to a low white blood cell count. Though the pathway had not been discovered at the time, it is now apparent that IRAK4 is important downstream of Toll-like receptors. The hope is that the Undiagnosed Diseases Program will help connect more genetic mutations to their effects. On a more fine-grained timescale, NIH Office of Rare Diseases Director Stephen Groft told reporters that the launch of the program is " coincident with a number of other events that are meaningful to the entire rare diseases community. " A conference on rare disorders is being held in Washington this week, which also marks the 25th anniversary of both the establishment of the National Organization for Rare Disorders and the Orphan Drug Act. (See related story in this issue.) Zerhouni said that though mysterious diseases are sometimes the first few cases of an emerging disease, in many cases a mysterious disease will turn out to be " known but rare. " Though the underlying pathology of some common diseases, like chronic fatigue syndrome, also means that a diagnosis is little more than a name to attach to a condition, common diseases are not often a diagnostic puzzle. Mysterious diseases tend to be rare by their very nature. Zerhouni also pointed to emerging diseases as an area where the Undiagnosed Diseases Program might come in handy as an early warning system of sorts. Additionally, he said, common disorders also are becoming more challenging to diagnose, as their molecular underpinnings are worked out in greater detail: " Even common diseases have many subtypes, " he said, giving the example of diabetes. To date, 16 genes associated with differential risk have been discovered, and it is likely that those genes - or others yet to be discovered - explain why some cases of diabetes appear to be much harder to treat than others. This email was cleaned by emailStripper, available for free from _http://www.papercut.biz/emailStripper.htm_ (http://www.papercut.biz/emailStripper.htm) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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