Published December 28, 2022 | Version v1
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PRESENTATION SLIDES: DOCUMENTED HUMAN OSTEOLOGICAL COLLECTIONS AS BIOBANKS: RELEVANCE FOR RARE DISEASES IDENTIFICATION IN THE PAST

  • 1. CRIA - Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia, NOVA FCSH
  • 2. Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Medicina & nstituto Universitário de Lisboa, Centro de Estudos e Investigação em Sociologia

Description

Slides Presentation: 23rd Paleopathology Association European Meeting, Vilnius, Lituânia, 25-29 Agosto. Paleopathology Association European (Vilnius, Lituânia)

Disease identification in paleopathology relies on the exercise of differential diagnosis, and interpretation. Only a few diseases leave macroscopic pathognomonic traits in bone, and even in cases where microscopic, biochemical and biomolecular analyses are used, diagnosis is invariably inconclusive. Additionally, bone response to a variety of etiologies tends to be homogenous, with mosaic pattern(s) of bone formation and destruction. Therefore, access to pathological cases from human remains of Documented Human Osteological Collections (DHOC) is an exceptional approach. The access to biographical data of the individuals incorporated into the DHOC includes the cause of death, ancestry, sex, age, clinical data and other information akin to clinical data allowing for the possibility of hypothesis-driven research in which bones changes correlate with causes of death - hence providing tested and informed differential diagnosis. In this sense, DHOC may be viewed as a biobank equivalent, i.e. biorepository that stores biological samples for research in the identification of bone changes related to diseases associated with clinical and personal data. This paper will explore known cases of diseases’ diagnoses, such as lepra, neoplasias, tuberculosis, syphilis, and diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis that have used DHOC as diagnostic testing grounds, to explore bone changes and methodological advancements. The paper also introduces the idea of DHOC as biobanks dedicated to the study of rare diseases, as rarely reposted diseases, in paleopathology. 

Keywords: Health, biorepository, biobanks, DHOC, differential diagnosis

Notes

Funding: Francisca Alves Cardoso is supported by FCT within the scope of CRIA - Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia (UIDB/04038/2020) Strategic Development Plan. FAC research is associated with the research projects Bone Matters / Matérias Ósseas (IF/00127/2014/CP1233/CT0003/ funded by FCT/Portugal), and Life After Death: Rethinking Human Remains and Human Osteological Collections as Cultural Heritage and Biobanks (2020.01014.CEECIND / funded by FCT/Portugal). Brígida Riso is supported by European Union's Horizon 2020 under grant agreement no 952377, project ERA Chair iSTARS.

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Alves-Cardoso & Riso, 2022_PPASlides Presentation.pdf

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Additional details

Related works

Is supplemented by
Presentation: 10.5281/zenodo.7487124 (DOI)

Funding

IF/00127/2014/CP1233/CT0003 – Portuguese Human Identified Skeletal Collections: Shaping their ethical and legal framework. IF/00127/2014/CP1233/CT0003
Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia
iSTARS – Informatics and Statistics for Advancement of Research Success 952377
European Commission
UIDB/04038/2020 – Centre for Research in Anthropology UIDB/04038/2020
Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia