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S. Pierson, J. Khor, Jasira Ziglar, Amy Y. Liu, Katherine Floess, E. NaPier, A. Gorzewski, M. Tamakloe, V. Powers, Faizaan Akhter, Eric Haljasmaa, Raj K. Jayanthan, A. Rubenstein, M. Repasky, K. Elenitoba-Johnson, J. Ruth, B. Jacobs, M. Streetly, L. Angenendt, J. Patier, S. Ferrero, P. Zinzani, L. Terriou, C. Casper, E. Jaffe, C. Hoffmann, É. Oksenhendler, A. Fosså, G. Srkalović, A. Chadburn, T. Uldrick, M. Lim, F. van Rhee, D. Fajgenbaum
30 1. 12. 2020.

ACCELERATE: A Patient-Powered Natural History Study Design Enabling Clinical and Therapeutic Discoveries in a Rare Disorder

Summary Geographically dispersed patients, inconsistent treatment tracking, and limited infrastructure slow research for many orphan diseases. We assess the feasibility of a patient-powered study design to overcome these challenges for Castleman disease, a rare hematologic disorder. Here, we report initial results from the ACCELERATE natural history registry. ACCELERATE includes a traditional physician-reported arm and a patient-powered arm, which enables patients to directly contribute medical data and biospecimens. This study design enables successful enrollment, with the 5-year minimum enrollment goal being met in 2 years. A median of 683 clinical, laboratory, and imaging data elements are captured per patient in the patient-powered arm compared with 37 in the physician-reported arm. These data reveal subgrouping characteristics, identify off-label treatments, support treatment guidelines, and are used in 17 clinical and translational studies. This feasibility study demonstrates that the direct-to-patient design is effective for collecting natural history data and biospecimens, tracking therapies, and providing critical research infrastructure.


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