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The SRDR is a national registry that records rare diseases in people of any age who live in Switzerland. It serves as a platform for scientists, health professionals, affected people, and politicians.The SRDR aims to collect epidemiological data on rare diseases, and data on changes to the diagnosis over time. The SRDR will further serve as a research platform and facilitate patient participation in national and international studies. The SRDR will promote harmonization of data and method between the numerous existing disease-specific registries in Switzerland, will strengthen the exchange with international rare disease registries for research and policy, and will build a network for communication for patients and health care providers.
Full description
Background: In Europe a disease is considered rare when fewer than one in 2'000 people are affected. Today, more than 7'000 rare diseases are known. Although scarce, rare diseases all together affect approximately 5-8% of the people around the world. In Switzerland, more than 500'000 people live with a rare disease. Clinical and epidemiological studies on rare diseases in Switzerland are lacking. Little is known about diagnostics, efficient treatment, and the course of rare diseases.
The cantonal Ethics Committee of Bern approved the SRDR project (project ID: 2017-02313, observational study, risk category A).
Objectives: The overall goal of the SRDR is to improve the care situation of people living with a rare disease in Switzerland. The development of a national registry to collect representative and complete data from children and adults with a rare disease in Switzerland helps to achieve this overall goal.
Primary objectives of the SRDR project:
Procedure: After a person has been diagnosed with a rare disease, the medical staff inform the patient and/or the legal representative orally about the SRDR and its purpose during regular consultation. The medical staff will hand over the written age-appropriate patient information and the informed consent form. Patient organizations and the staff from the SRDR also have the possibility to inform people about the SRDR. Further, patients have the possibility to use a secure web-based application for self-notification.
The patient or/and the legal representative have 6 weeks to give or refuse the informed consent. Patients who wish to participate sign the consent form and are then registered in the SRDR. If a patient or/and legal representative do neither refuse registration nor sign informed consent within 6 weeks, the data will be registered. If a patient does not wish to participate, only a minimal anonymous data set is recorded.
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Exclusion criteria
500,000 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Cheryl von Arx; Myrofora Goutaki, Prof Dr
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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