AI Article Synopsis

  • Excessive mucocutaneous bleeding (MCB) significantly affects the physical and mental health of individuals living with it, and there's a need for more research on various bleeding disorders.
  • The National Hemophilia Foundation and American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network are developing a research plan by consulting stakeholders to determine priorities and create specific research questions.
  • Expert working groups identified 38 key research questions focused on MCB biology and different bleeding disorders, emphasizing the importance of collaboration and innovative treatments in future studies.

Article Abstract

Background: Excessive or abnormal mucocutaneous bleeding (MCB) may impact all aspects of the physical and psychosocial wellbeing of those who live with it (PWMCB). The evidence base for the optimal diagnosis and management of disorders such as inherited platelet disorders, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT), hypermobility spectrum disorders (HSD), Ehlers-Danlos syndromes (EDS), and von Willebrand disease (VWD) remains thin with enormous potential for targeted research.

Research Design And Methods: National Hemophilia Foundation and American Thrombosis and Hemostasis Network initiated the development of a National Research Blueprint for Inherited Bleeding Disorders with extensive all-stakeholder consultations to identify the priorities of people with inherited bleeding disorders and those who care for them. They recruited multidisciplinary expert working groups (WG) to distill community-identified priorities into concrete research questions and score their feasibility, impact, and risk.

Results: WG2 detailed 38 high priority research questions concerning the biology of MCB, VWD, inherited qualitative platelet function defects, HDS/EDS, HHT, bleeding disorder of unknown cause, novel therapeutics, and aging.

Conclusions: Improving our understanding of the basic biology of MCB, large cohort longitudinal natural history studies, collaboration, and creative approaches to novel therapeutics will be important in maximizing the benefit of future research for the entire MCB community.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17474086.2023.2171983DOI Listing

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