Informing a national rare disease registry strategy in Australia: a mixed methods study

Author:

Ruseckaite RasaORCID,Caruso Marisa,Mudunna Chethana,Helwani Falak,Millis Nicole,Ahern Susannah

Abstract

Abstract Background Rare disease registries (RDRs) facilitate monitoring of rare diseases by pooling small datasets to increase clinical and epidemiological knowledge of rare diseases and promote patient centred best practice. The aim of this study was to understand the current state of RDRs in Australia, data captured, impact on patient outcomes, funding models, and barriers and enablers regarding their establishment and maintenance. Methods An exploratory sequential mixed methods study design was adopted. First, a list of Australian RDRs, primary contacts and data custodians was generated through online and consumer group (Rare Voices Australia (RVA)) contacts. A cross-sectional, anonymous online survey was distributed to registry custodians, managers, or principal investigators of 74 identified Australian RDRs, 88 RVA Partners, 17 pharmaceutical organizations and 12 RVA Scientific and Medical Advisory Committee members. Next, managers and coordinators of RDRs and databases who participated in the survey were invited to participate in semi-structured interviews. Quantitative and qualitative data were analysed using basic descriptive statistics and content analysis, respectively. Results Forty RDRs responded to the survey; nine were national, five were based in Australia and New Zealand, and the remaining were global. Of the 40 survey respondents, eight were interviewed. Most of the RDRs captured similar information regarding patient characteristics, comorbidities and clinical features, diagnosis, family history, genetic testing, procedures or treatment types, response to treatments and complications of treatments. Better treatment outcomes, changes in process of care and changes in quality of care were the most frequently reported benefits of the RDRs. The main challenges proved to be cost/funding of data collection, data completeness, and patient consent. When asked, the participants identified opportunities and challenges regarding potential options to streamline RDRs in Australia in the future. Conclusion Findings from this study highlighted significant dataset heterogeneity based on the individual disease, and current lack of interoperability and coordination between different existing RDRs in Australia. Nevertheless, a nationally coordinated approach to RDRs should be investigated given the particular benefits RDRs offer, such as access to research and the monitoring of new disease-modifying treatments.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy

Reference29 articles.

1. European Commission. Rare Diseases. https://ec.europa.eu/health/non_communicable_diseases/rare_diseases_en. Accessed July 6, 2022.

2. Orphanet. 2012. About Rare Diseases. https://www.orpha.net/consor/cgi-bin/Education_AboutRareDiseases. php?lng = EN.

3. United States Department of Health & Human Services. 2019. FAQs About Rare Diseases. https://rarediseases.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/RDD-FAQ-2019.pdf. Accessed July 6, 2022.

4. Rare Voices Australia. https://rarevoices.org.au/. Accessed July 6, 2023.

5. The National Strategic Action Plan for Rare Diseases. https://rarevoices.org.au/action-plan/. Accessed July 6, 2023.

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