Published October 15, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The use or generation of biomedical data and existing medicines to discover and establish new treatments for patients with rare diseases – recommendations of the IRDiRC Data Mining and Repurposing Task Force

  • 1. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA
  • 2. Rare Diseases Drug Discovery Unit, Takeda, Cambridge, MA, USA
  • 3. IRDiRC Scientific Secretariat, Inserm-US14, Paris, France
  • 4. Université de Lille, Inserm, Institut Pasteur de Lille, U1177 – Drugs and Molecules for Living Systems, Lille, France
  • 5. HealX, Cambridge, UK
  • 6. University of Colorado, Denver School of Medicine, Denver, USA
  • 7. University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, the Netherlands
  • 8. EURORDIS-Rare Diseases Europe, Paris, France
  • 9. Chiesi Farmaceutici SpA, Parma, Italy

Description

The number of available therapies for rare diseases remains low, as fewer than 6% of rare diseases have an approved treatment option. The International Rare Diseases Research Consortium (IRDiRC) set up the multi-stakeholder Data Mining and Repurposing (DMR) Task Force to examine the potential of applying biomedical data mining strategies to identify new opportunities to use existing pharmaceutical compounds in new ways and to accelerate the pace of drug development for rare disease patients. In reviewing past successes of data mining for drug repurposing, and planning for future biomedical research capacity, the DMR Task Force identified four strategic infrastructure investment areas to focus on in order to accelerate rare disease research productivity and drug development: (1) improving the capture and sharing of self-reported patient data, (2) better integration of existing research data, (3) increasing experimental testing capacity, and (4) sharing of rare disease research and development expertise. Additionally, the DMR Task Force also recommended a number of strategies to increase data mining and repurposing opportunities for rare diseases research as well as the development of individualized and precision medicine strategies.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
SUPPORT-IRDIRC - Support for international rare disease research to serve the IRDiRC objectives 305207