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The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into digital healthcare, particularly in the anonymisation and processing of health information, holds considerable potential. OBJECTIVES: To develop a methodology using Generative Pre-trained Transformer (GPT) models to preserve the essence of medical advice in doctors' responses, while editing them for use in scientific studies. METHODS: German and English responses from EXABO, a rare respiratory disease platform, were processed using iterative refinement and other prompt engineering techniques, with a focus on removing identifiable and irrelevant content. RESULTS: Of 40 responses tested, 31 were accurately modified according to the developed guidelines. Challenges included misclassification and incomplete removal, with incremental prompting proving more accurate than combined prompting. CONCLUSION: GPT-4 models show promise in medical response editing, but face challenges in accuracy and consistency. Precision in prompt engineering is essential in medical contexts to minimise bias and retain relevant information.
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Inteligencia Artificial , Humanos , Médicos , Alemania , Registros Electrónicos de SaludRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: In individuals suffering from a rare disease the diagnostic process and the confirmation of a final diagnosis often extends over many years. Factors contributing to delayed diagnosis include health care professionals' limited knowledge of rare diseases and frequent (co-)occurrence of mental disorders that may complicate and delay the diagnostic process. The ZSE-DUO study aims to assess the benefits of a combination of a physician focusing on somatic aspects with a mental health expert working side by side as a tandem in the diagnostic process. STUDY DESIGN: This multi-center, prospective controlled study has a two-phase cohort design. METHODS: Two cohorts of 682 patients each are sequentially recruited from 11 university-based German Centers for Rare Diseases (CRD): the standard care cohort (control, somatic expertise only) and the innovative care cohort (experimental, combined somatic and mental health expertise). Individuals aged 12 years and older presenting with symptoms and signs which are not explained by current diagnoses will be included. Data will be collected prior to the first visit to the CRD's outpatient clinic (T0), at the first visit (T1) and 12 months thereafter (T2). OUTCOMES: Primary outcome is the percentage of patients with one or more confirmed diagnoses covering the symptomatic spectrum presented. Sample size is calculated to detect a 10 percent increase from 30% in standard care to 40% in the innovative dual expert cohort. Secondary outcomes are (a) time to diagnosis/diagnoses explaining the symptomatology; (b) proportion of patients successfully referred from CRD to standard care; (c) costs of diagnosis including incremental cost effectiveness ratios; (d) predictive value of screening instruments administered at T0 to identify patients with mental disorders; (e) patients' quality of life and evaluation of care; and f) physicians' satisfaction with the innovative care approach. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first multi-center study to investigate the effects of a mental health specialist working in tandem with a somatic expert physician in CRDs. If this innovative approach proves successful, it will be made available on a larger scale nationally and promoted internationally. In the best case, ZSE-DUO can significantly shorten the time to diagnosis for a suspected rare disease. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov; Identifier: NCT03563677; First posted: June 20, 2018, https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03563677 .
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Enfermedades Raras , Niño , Estudios de Cohortes , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Humanos , Estudios Multicéntricos como Asunto , Estudios Prospectivos , Calidad de Vida , Enfermedades Raras/diagnóstico , Resultado del TratamientoRESUMEN
In the European Union a disease is classified as rare if it affects no more than 5 out of 10,000 people. Currently, there are more than 6000 rare diseases, consisting of a large and heterogeneous number of different diseases that are complex in their symptomatology, multidimensional and therefore difficult to classify in everyday medical practice. This complicates the diagnosis and treatment as well as finding a suitable contact person, as there are only a few experts for each individual rare disease. The medical care atlas for rare diseases www.se-atlas.de enables the search for care facilities and patient organizations for specific rare diseases by disease name and presents the search results geographically. It also provides an overview of all German centers for rare diseases, which are a contact point for patients with an unclear diagnosis. The se-atlas serves as a compass through the heterogeneous amount of information on care facilities for rare diseases and provides low-threshold information for a broad user group, from affected persons to members of the medical care team.
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Atención al Paciente , Enfermedades Raras , Humanos , Enfermedades Raras/diagnóstico , Enfermedades Raras/terapiaRESUMEN
Rare lung diseases affect 1.5-3 million people in Europe while causing bad prognosis or early deaths for patients. The European Reference Network for Respiratory Diseases (ERN-Lung) is a patient centric network, funded by the European Union (EU). The aims of ERN-LUNG is to increase healthcare and research regarding rare respiratory diseases. An initial need for cross-border healthcare and research is the use of registries and databases. A typical problem in registries for RDs is the data exchange, since the registries use different kind of data with different types or descriptions. Therefore, ERN-Lung decided to create a new Registry Data-Warehouse (RDW) where different existing registries are connected to enable cross-border healthcare within ERN-Lung. This work facilitates the aims, conception and implementation for the RDW, while considering a semantic interoperability approach. We created a common dataset (CDS) to have a common descriptions of respiratory diseases patients within the ERN registries. We further developed the RDW based on Open Source Registry System for Rare Diseases (OSSE), which includes a Metadata Repository with the Samply.MDR to unique describe data for the minimal dataset. Within the RDW, data from existing registries is not stored in a central database. The RDW uses the approach of the "Decentral Search" and can send requests to the connected registries, whereas only aggregated data is returned about how many patients with specific characteristics are available. However, further work is needed to connect the different existing registries to the RDW and to perform first studies.
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Data Warehousing , Enfermedades Raras , Europa (Continente)/epidemiología , Humanos , Metadatos , Enfermedades Raras/epidemiología , Sistema de RegistrosRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: About 30 million people in the EU and USA, respectively, suffer from a rare disease. Driven by European legislative requirements, national strategies for the improvement of care in rare diseases are being developed. To improve timely and correct diagnosis for patients with rare diseases, the development of a registry for undiagnosed patients was recommended by the German National Action Plan. In this paper we focus on the question on how such a registry for undiagnosed patients can be built and which information it should contain. RESULTS: To develop a registry for undiagnosed patients, a software for data acquisition and storage, an appropriate data set and an applicable terminology/classification system for the data collected are needed. We have used the open-source software Open-Source Registry System for Rare Diseases (OSSE) to build the registry for undiagnosed patients. Our data set is based on the minimal data set for rare disease patient registries recommended by the European Rare Disease Registries Platform. We extended this Common Data Set to also include symptoms, clinical findings and other diagnoses. In order to ensure findability, comparability and statistical analysis, symptoms, clinical findings and diagnoses have to be encoded. We evaluated three medical ontologies (SNOMED CT, HPO and LOINC) for their usefulness. With exact matches of 98% of tested medical terms, a mean number of five deposited synonyms, SNOMED CT seemed to fit our needs best. HPO and LOINC provided 73% and 31% of exacts matches of clinical terms respectively. Allowing more generic codes for a defined symptom, with SNOMED CT 99%, with HPO 89% and with LOINC 39% of terms could be encoded. CONCLUSIONS: With the use of the OSSE software and a data set, which, in addition to the Common Data Set, focuses on symptoms and clinical findings, a functioning and meaningful registry for undiagnosed patients can be implemented. The next step is the implementation of the registry in centres for rare diseases. With the help of medical informatics and big data analysis, case similarity analyses could be realized and aid as a decision-support tool enabling diagnosis of some undiagnosed patients.
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Enfermedades Raras , Programas Informáticos , Humanos , Enfermedades Raras/diagnóstico , Sistema de Registros , Proyectos de InvestigaciónRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Lung disease phenotype varies widely even in the F508del (homozygous) genotype. Leukocyte-driven inflammation is important for pulmonary disease pathogenesis in cystic fibrosis (CF). Blood cytokines correlate negatively with pulmonary function in F508del homozygous patients, and gap junction proteins (GJA) might be related to the influx of blood cells into the lung and influence disease course. We aimed to assess the relationship between GJA1/GJA4 genotypes and the clinical disease phenotype. METHODS: One-hundred-and-sixteen homozygous F508del patients (mean age 27 years, m/f 66/50) were recruited from the CF centers of Bonn, Frankfurt, and Amsterdam. Sequence analysis was performed for GJA1 and GJA4. The clinical disease course was assessed over 3 years using pulmonary function tests, body mass index, Pseudomonas aeruginosa colonization, diabetes mellitus, survival to end-stage lung disease, blood and sputum inflammatory markers. RESULTS: Sequence analysis revealed one clinically relevant single nucleotide polymorphism. In this GJA4 variant (rs41266431), homozygous G variant carriers (n = 84/116; 72.4%) had poorer pulmonary function (FVC% pred: mean 78/86, p < 0.040) and survival to end-stage lung disease was lower (p < 0.029). The frequency of P. aeruginosa colonization was not influenced by the genotype, but in those chronically colonized, those with the G/G genotype had reduced pulmonary function (FVC% pred: mean 67/80, p < 0.049). Serum interleukin-8 (median: 12.4/6.7 pg/ml, p < 0.052) and sputum leukocytes (2305/437.5 pg/ml, p < 0.025) were higher for the G/G genotype. CONCLUSIONS: In carriers of the A allele (27.6%) the GJA4 variant is associated with significantly better protection against end-stage lung disease and superior pulmonary function test results in F508del homozygous patients. This SNP has the potential of a modifier gene for phenotyping severity of CF lung disease, in addition to the CFTR genotype. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: The study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT04242420, retrospectively on January 24th, 2020.
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Rare conditions can make it difficult for physicians and healthcare providers to find the right answers and treatment for patients suffering rare diseases. The number of experts specializing in rare diseases in Europe is low. In order to ensure qualified diagnosis, treatment and care for these patients, the European Commission has founded the European Reference Networks (ERNs), which are virtual networks that include healthcare providers across Europe aiming to provide better care for patients across Europe. The European Reference Network LUNG (ERN-LUNG) has been established for patients with rare respiratory diseases seeking care and advice on all aspects of rare respiratory diseases. In the context of ERN-LUNG, the Expert Advisory Board (EXABO) was implemented. EXABO is a pan-European internet platform based on a question-answering system to support answering questions regarding all areas of rare respiratory diseases. This paper gives a brief overview of the first steps taken regarding the implementation of the EXABO platform, the challenges faced and the lessons that have been learned.
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Enfermedades Raras , Trastornos Respiratorios , Europa (Continente) , HumanosRESUMEN
Clinical decision support systems (CDSS) help to improve the diagnostics and treatment of rare diseases (RD). As one of four funded consortia of the Medical Informatics Initiative supported by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, Germany), MIRACUM develops a clinical decision support system (CDSS) for RD based on distributed data of ten university hospitals. The CDSS will be developed at the Rare Diseases Centres (RDC) of the MIRACUM consortium. Since it is essential to deliver decision support at the right time and place in the clinician's workflow, this study aimed to capture relevant information of the RDCs regarding patient admission and diagnostic process. Additionally, we investigated how patient documentation and digitalisation is performed at the centres. Therefore, we conducted a cross-sectional survey involving experts in the RDs domain to capture relevant information for the further development of a CDSS in RD. For each centre, one expert on RDs participated in the study (n=8). The survey identified several challenges regarding the reuse of patient data, e.g. the paper-based documentation of a patientâAZs medical history and coding of diagnoses using ICD-10. However, we noticed a relevant use of current software diagnosis support and a similarly performed diagnostic process in all RDC. Further studies are needed to get more detailed insights and to define specific requirements.
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Sistemas de Apoyo a Decisiones Clínicas , Estudios Transversales , Alemania , Humanos , Enfermedades Raras , Programas InformáticosRESUMEN
The National Action Plan for People with Rare Diseases contains 52 concrete actions, including in the fields of care, research, diagnosis, and information management. With the aim of improving the quality and interoperability of national registries in the long term, action 28 proposed the establishment of a "Rare Diseases Registry" strategy group. The strategy group began its work in 2016. In this report, the group takes into account developments at the national and international level in order to develop recommendations for national initiatives.In addition to this, the group reports on consent and implementation as well as on the adaptation of a minimal dataset for use in rare disease registries and mapping the used data elements and schemata in a metadata repository. This position paper was created by the strategy group together with additional authors. The paper reached a consensus within the strategy group and can be seen as a concept paper of the Rare Diseases Registry strategy group.
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Metadatos , Enfermedades Raras , Confidencialidad , Alemania , Humanos , Sistema de RegistrosRESUMEN
Clinical Decision Support Systems (CDSS) are promising to support physicians in finding the right diagnosis of patients with rare diseases (RD). The MIRACUM consortium, which includes ten university hospitals in Germany, will establish a diagnosis support system for RD. This system conducts a similarity analysis on distributed clinical data with the aim to identify similar patient cases at each MIRACUM site to offer the physician a hint to a possible diagnosis.
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Sistemas de Apoyo a Decisiones Clínicas , Alemania , Hospitales Universitarios , Humanos , MédicosRESUMEN
The Open Source Registry for Rare Diseases (OSSE) provides a concept and a software for the management of registries for patients with rare diseases. A disease is defined as rare if less than 5 out of 10,000 people are affected. Up to date, approximately 6,000 rare diseases are catalogued. Networking and data exchange for research purposes remains challenging due to the paucity of interoperability and due to the fact that small data stocks are stored locally. The so called "Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, Reusable" (FAIR) Data Principles have been developed to improve research in the field of rare diseases. Subsequently, the OSSE architecture was adapted to implement the FAIR Data Principles. Therefore, the so-called FAIR Data Point was integrated into OSSE to provide a description of metadata in a FAIR manner. OSSE relies on the existing metadata repository (MDR), which is used in to define data elements in the system. This is an important step towards unified documentation across multiple registries. The integration and use of new procedures to improve interoperability plays an important role in the context of registries for rare diseases.
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Metadatos , Enfermedades Raras , Sistema de Registros , Estadística como Asunto , Humanos , Investigación , Programas InformáticosRESUMEN
Due to low prevalence of rare diseases and lack of expertise, patients suffering rare diseases are challenged with finding experts that are specialized and experienced in treating their conditions and get qualified answers. To address this issue, the approach of an interactive platform was made, which should allow affected patients or physicians the possibility to ask experts their specific questions to gather and improve their knowledge about their condition. This paper introduces the pan-European Internet platform EXABO, an Expert Advisory Board, which is developed within the framework of the European Reference Network for rare respiratory diseases (ERN-LUNG). The purpose of establishing this platform is initially dedicated to rare respiratory diseases in whole Europe, whilst the set-up is however, planned to be a generic tool for additional diseases or groups of diseases. This paper gives an overview of the concept and planning of the EXABO platform and shows how the platform is to be implemented.
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Enfermedades Raras , Trastornos Respiratorios , Europa (Continente) , Humanos , InternetRESUMEN
se-atlas - the health service information platform for rare diseases - is part of the German National Action Plan for People with Rare Diseases. The website www.se-atlas.de provides an overview of health care providers and support groups focusing on rare diseases in Germany. Since the start of se-atlas in 2013, several strategies are being developed and evaluated. This paper gives an overview about the expectations and visions for se-atlas at the beginning of the project, the challenges and lessons learned within the project period and how se-atlas is implemented today.
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Personal de Salud , Enfermedades Raras , Alemania , Humanos , Grupos de AutoayudaRESUMEN
Developments in managing CF continue to drive dramatic improvements in survival. As newborn screening rolls-out across Europe, CF centres are increasingly caring for cohorts of patients who have minimal lung disease on diagnosis. With the introduction of mutation-specific therapies and the prospect of truly personalised medicine, patients have the potential to enjoy good quality of life in adulthood with ever-increasing life expectancy. The landmark Standards of Care published in 2005 set out what high quality CF care is and how it can be delivered throughout Europe. This underwent a fundamental re-write in 2014, resulting in three documents; center framework, quality management and best practice guidelines. This document is a revision of the latter, updating standards for best practice in key aspects of CF care, in the context of a fast-moving and dynamic field. In continuing to give a broad overview of the standards expected for newborn screening, diagnosis, preventative treatment of lung disease, nutrition, complications, transplant/end of life care and psychological support, this consensus on best practice is expected to prove useful to clinical teams both in countries where CF care is developing and those with established CF centres. The document is an ECFS product and endorsed by the CF Network in ERN LUNG and CF Europe.
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Fibrosis Quística/diagnóstico , Fibrosis Quística/terapia , Adolescente , Adulto , Niño , Preescolar , Fibrosis Quística/complicaciones , Europa (Continente) , Humanos , Lactante , Recién Nacido , Tamizaje Neonatal , Guías de Práctica Clínica como Asunto , Apoyo Social , Cuidado Terminal , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Rare diseases are, by definition, very serious and chronic diseases with a high negative impact on quality of life. Approximately 350 million people worldwide live with rare diseases. The resulting high disease burden triggers health information search, but helpful, high-quality, and up-to-date information is often hard to find. Therefore, the improvement of health information provision has been integrated in many national plans for rare diseases, discussing the telephone as one access option. In this context, this study examines the need for a telephone service offering information for people affected by rare diseases, their relatives, and physicians. METHODS: In total, 107 individuals participated in a qualitative interview study conducted in Germany. Sixty-eight individuals suffering from a rare disease or related to somebody with rare diseases and 39 health care professionals took part. Individual interviews were conducted using a standardized semi-structured questionnaire. Interviews were analysed using the qualitative content analysis, triangulating patients, relatives, and health care professionals. The fulfilment of qualitative data processing standards has been controlled for. RESULTS: Out of 68 patients and relatives and 39 physicians, 52 and 18, respectively, advocated for the establishment of a rare diseases telephone service. Interviewees expected a helpline to include expert staffing, personal contact, good availability, low technical barriers, medical and psychosocial topics of counselling, guidance in reducing information chaos, and referrals. Health care professionals highlighted the importance of medical topics of counselling-in particular, differential diagnostics-and referrals. CONCLUSIONS: Therefore, the need for a national rare diseases helpline was confirmed in this study. Due to limited financial resources, existing offers should be adapted in a stepwise procedure in accordance with the identified attributes.
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Personal de Salud/psicología , Necesidades y Demandas de Servicios de Salud , Educación del Paciente como Asunto/métodos , Enfermedades Raras , Teléfono , Adolescente , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Consejo/métodos , Femenino , Alemania , Humanos , Entrevistas como Asunto , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Satisfacción Personal , Investigación Cualitativa , Calidad de Vida , Adulto JovenRESUMEN
se-atlas - the health service information platform for rare diseases - is part of the German National Action Plan for People with Rare Diseases and is funded by the German Federal Ministry of Health. The objective of se-atlas as a web-based platform is to illustrate those medical care institutions that are linked to rare diseases, in a transparent and user-friendly way. The website provides an overview of medical care institutions and support groups focusing on rare diseases in Germany. The primary target groups of se-atlas are affected patients, their relatives and physicians but can also include non-medical professionals and the general public. In order to make it easier to look up medical care institutions or support groups and optimize the search results displayed, various strategies are being developed and evaluated. Hence, the allocation of diseases to appropriate medical care institutions and support groups is currently a main focus. Since its launch in 2015, se-atlas has grown continuously and now incorporates five times more entries than were included 20 months prior. Among this data are the current rare diseases centres in Germany, which play a major role in providing patient-centred healthcare by acting as primary contact points for people with rare diseases. Further expansion and maintenance of the data base raises several organisational and software-related challenges. For one, the data should be completed by adding more high-quality information, while not neglecting the existing entries and maintaining their high level of quality in the long term.
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Información de Salud al Consumidor/organización & administración , Gestión de la Información en Salud/organización & administración , Difusión de la Información/métodos , Portales del Paciente , Enfermedades Raras/diagnóstico , Enfermedades Raras/terapia , Atención a la Salud/organización & administración , Alemania , HumanosRESUMEN
Starting in 2017, European Reference Networks (ERNs) for rare disease patients will be established in the European Union. ERNs will pool expertise in clinical centres and will establish cross-border exchange mechanisms in order to facilitate access to diagnosis and care. The integration of ERNs in the German healthcare system will pose a significant challenge. The main issues include: (i) competition between national and European interests in the conflict of national responsibility and intended cross-border availability of healthcare services, (ii) the lack of a funding concept, and (iii) the establishment of ERNs in EU member states in which implementation of national action plans for people with rare diseases is lagging behind. The lower implementation pace of the centre model that is part of the German action plan and the higher level of detail of the ERNs in terms of services and activities provided will likely lead to an appreciation that achieved patient benefits are attributed to ERNs.
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Atención a la Salud/organización & administración , Unión Europea/organización & administración , Programas de Gobierno/organización & administración , Internacionalidad , Modelos Organizacionales , Enfermedades Raras/diagnóstico , Enfermedades Raras/terapia , Alemania , Enfermedades Raras/epidemiologíaRESUMEN
Meager amounts of data stored locally, a small number of experts, and a broad spectrum of technological solutions incompatible with each other characterize the landscape of registries for rare diseases in Germany. Hence, the free software Open Source Registry for Rare Diseases (OSSE) was created to unify and streamline the process of establishing specific rare disease patient registries. The data to be collected is specified based on metadata descriptions within the registry framework's so-called metadata repository (MDR), which was developed according to the ISO/IEC 11179 standard. The use of a central MDR allows for sharing the same data elements across any number of registries, thus providing a technical prerequisite for making data comparable and mergeable between registries and promoting interoperability.With OSSE, the foundation is laid to operate linked patient registries while respecting strong data protection regulations. Using the federated search feature, data for clinical studies can be identified across registries. Data integrity, however, remains intact since no actual data leaves the premises without the owner's consent. Additionally, registry solutions other than OSSE can participate via the OSSE bridgehead, which acts as a translator between OSSE registry networks and non-OSSE registries. The pseudonymization service Mainzelliste adds further data protection.Currently, more than 10 installations are under construction in clinical environments (including university hospitals in Frankfurt, Hamburg, Freiburg and Münster). The feedback given by the users will influence further development of OSSE. As an example, the installation process of the registry for undiagnosed patients at University Hospital Frankfurt is described in more detail.
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Confidencialidad , Sistemas de Administración de Bases de Datos/organización & administración , Bases de Datos Factuales , Registros Electrónicos de Salud/organización & administración , Almacenamiento y Recuperación de la Información/métodos , Enfermedades Raras/epidemiología , Sistema de Registros/estadística & datos numéricos , Seguridad Computacional , Alemania/epidemiología , Humanos , Metadatos , Enfermedades Raras/diagnóstico , Enfermedades Raras/terapia , Programas InformáticosRESUMEN
The improved survival in people with cystic fibrosis has led to an increasing number of patients reaching adulthood. This trend is likely to be maintained over the next decades, suggesting a need to increase the number of centres with expertise in the management of adult patients with cystic fibrosis. These centres should be capable of delivering multidisciplinary care addressing the complexity of the disease, in addition to addressing the psychological burden on patients and their families. Further issues that require attention are organ transplantation and end of life management.Lung disease in adults with cystic fibrosis drives most of the clinical care requirements, and major life-threatening complications, such as respiratory infection, respiratory failure, pneumothorax and haemoptysis, and the management of lung transplantation require expertise from trained respiratory physicians. The taskforce therefore strongly reccommends that medical leadership in multidisciplinary adult teams should be attributed to a respiratory physician adequately trained in cystic fibrosis management.The task force suggests the implementation of a core curriculum for trainees in adult respiratory medicine and the selection and accreditation of training centres that deliver postgraduate training to the standards of the HERMES programme.
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Fibrosis Quística/terapia , Necesidades y Demandas de Servicios de Salud , Neumología/educación , Cuidado Terminal , Adulto , Comités Consultivos , Fibrosis Quística/psicología , Manejo de la Enfermedad , Europa (Continente) , Planificación en Salud , Humanos , Trasplante de Pulmón , Cooperación del Paciente , Neumología/organización & administración , Apoyo Social , Sociedades Médicas , Transición a la Atención de Adultos/organización & administración , Recursos HumanosRESUMEN
BACKGROUND: A clinical study to investigate the leukotriene B(4) (LTB(4))-receptor antagonist BIIL 284 in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients was prematurely terminated due to a significantly increased risk of adverse pulmonary events. We aimed to establish the effect of BIIL284 in models of Pseudomonas aeruginosa lung infection, thereby contributing to a better understanding of what could have led to adverse pulmonary events in CF patients. METHODS: P. aeruginosa DNA in the blood of CF patients during and after acute pulmonary exacerbations and in stable patients with non-CF bronchiectasis (NCFB) and healthy individuals was assessed by PCR. The effect of BIIL 284 treatment was tested in an agar bead murine model of P. aeruginosa lung infection. Bacterial count and inflammation were evaluated in lung and other organs. RESULTS: Most CF patients (98%) and all patients with NCFB and healthy individuals had negative P. aeruginosa DNA in their blood. Similarly, the P. aeruginosa-infected mice showed bacterial counts in the lung but not in the blood or spleen. BIIL 284 treatment decreased pulmonary neutrophils and increased P. aeruginosa numbers in mouse lungs leading to significantly higher bacteremia rates and lung inflammation compared to placebo treated animals. CONCLUSIONS: Decreased airway neutrophils induced lung proliferation and severe bacteremia in a murine model of P. aeruginosa lung infection. These data suggest that caution should be taken when administering anti-inflammatory compounds to patients with bacterial infections.