Japan has been facing challenges relating to specifically defined rare diseases, called Nan-Byo in Japanese (literally 'difficult'+'illness'), and has already taken measures for them since 1972. This governmental support has surely benefited Nan-Byo patients; however, those suffering from medically unidentified conditions do not fall into this scheme and thus still confront difficulty in obtaining an examination, a diagnosis, and a treatment. To identify such rare and often undiagnosed diseases, we must integrate systematic diagnosis by medical experts with phenotypic and genetic data matching. Thus, in collaboration with Nan-Byo researchers and the Japanese universal healthcare system, the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development launched the Initiative on Rare and Undiagnosed Diseases (IRUD) in 2015. IRUD is an ambitious challenge to construct a comprehensive medical network and an internationally compatible data-sharing framework. Synergizing with existing next-generation sequencing capabilities and other infrastructure, the nationwide medical research consortium has successfully grown to accept more than 2000 undiagnosed registrants by December 2016. We also aim at expanding the concept of microattribution throughout the initiative; that is, proper credit as collaborators shall be given to local primary care physicians, nurses and paramedics, patients, their family members, and those supporting the affected individuals whenever appropriate. As it shares many challenges among similar global efforts, IRUD's future successes and lessons learned will significantly contribute to ongoing international endeavors, involving players in basic research, applied research, and societal implementation.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5558173PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2017.106DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

rare undiagnosed
12
undiagnosed diseases
12
initiative rare
8
diseases irud
8
japan's initiative
4
rare
4
undiagnosed
4
diseases
4
irud diagnostic
4
diagnostic odyssey
4

Similar Publications

Background: Variants in the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) cause a diverse collection of mitochondrial diseases and have extensive phenotypic overlap with Mendelian diseases encoded on the nuclear genome. The mtDNA is often not specifically evaluated in patients with suspected Mendelian disease, resulting in overlooked diagnostic variants.

Methods: Using dedicated pipelines to address the technical challenges posed by the mtDNA - circular genome, variant heteroplasmy, and nuclear misalignment - single nucleotide variants, small indels, and large mtDNA deletions were called from exome and genome sequencing data, in addition to RNA-sequencing when available.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Advancements in sequencing technologies have significantly improved clinical genetic testing, yet the diagnostic yield remains around 30-40%. Emerging sequencing technologies are now being deployed in the clinical setting to address the remaining diagnostic gap.

Methods: We tested whether short-read genome sequencing could increase diagnostic yield in individuals enrolled into the UCI-GREGoR research study, who had suspected Mendelian conditions and prior inconclusive clinical genetic testing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Uncovering potential causal genes for undiagnosed congenital anomalies using an in-house pipeline for trio-based whole-genome sequencing.

Hum Genomics

January 2025

Division of Genome Science, Department of Precision Medicine, Korea National Institute of Health, Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency, Cheongju, Chungbuk, 28159, Republic of Korea.

Background: Congenital anomalies (CAs) encompass a wide spectrum of structural and functional abnormalities during fetal development, commonly presenting at birth. Identifying the cause of CA is essential for accurate diagnosis and treatment. Using a target-gene approach, genetic variants could be found in certain CA patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An Incidental Finding of Whipple's Disease Masquerading as Nonspecific, Long-Standing Symptoms.

Case Rep Infect Dis

December 2024

WakeMed's Division of Infectious Diseases, WakeMed Health and Hospitals, 3000 New Bern Ave, Raleigh 27610, North Carolina, USA.

Whipple's disease is a rare bacterial infection that is often present for years prior to diagnosis. Symptoms are nonspecific in the early stages of presentation and are primarily gastrointestinal in nature. The disease may progress with more systemic symptoms including arthralgia, fever, lymphadenopathy, cardiovascular disease, and central nervous system involvement.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This is a novel case of idiopathic chylopericardium and chylothorax in a young male who had no significant medical history. He first presented with dyspnea due to idiopathic chylopericardium, which was refractory to medical and surgical treatments, including a medium-chain triglyceride diet, octreotide, and video-assisted pericardial window. The chylopericardium persisted and progressed to concomitant left-sided chylothorax.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!