1. Global systematic review of primary immunodeficiency registries
- Author
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Marzieh Tavakol, Waleed Al-Herz, Gholamreza Azizi, Arash Kalantari, Asghar Aghamohammadi, Vicki Modell, Ahmed Aziz Bousfiha, Fred Modell, Monireh Mohsenzadegan, Lennart Hammarström, Hossein Esmaeilzadeh, Hassan Abolhassani, Tooba Momen, Mahnaz Sadeghi-Shabestari, Samaneh Delavari, Laleh Sharifi, Reza Yazdani, Antonio Condino-Neto, Mahsa Sohani, Jessica Quinn, Soheila Aleyasin, Mikko Seppänen, Jordan S. Orange, Zahra Chavoshzadeh, Paniz Shirmast, Roya Sherkat, Kathleen E. Sullivan, Hamid Ahanchian, Farahzad Jabbari-Azad, and Seyed Alireza Mahdaviani
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Burden of disease ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Asia ,Primary Immunodeficiency Diseases ,Immunology ,03 medical and health sciences ,Neonatal Screening ,0302 clinical medicine ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Registries ,Pathology, Molecular ,030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Antibody deficiency ,business.industry ,Infant, Newborn ,medicine.disease ,3. Good health ,030104 developmental biology ,IMUNOENSAIO ,Family medicine ,Africa ,Mutation ,Primary immunodeficiency ,business ,Database research - Abstract
During the last 4 decades, registration of patients with primary immunodeficiencies (PID) has played an essential role in different aspects of these diseases worldwide including epidemiological indexes, policymaking, quality controls of care/life, facilitation of genetic studies and clinical trials as well as improving our understanding about the natural history of the disease and the immune system function. However, due to the limitation of sustainable resources supporting these registries, inconsistency in diagnostic criteria and lack of molecular diagnosis as well as difficulties in the documentation and designing any universal platform, the global perspective of these diseases remains unclear.Published and unpublished studies from January 1981 to June 2020 were systematically reviewed on PubMed, Web of Science and Scopus. Additionally, the reference list of all studies was hand-searched for additional studies. This effort identified a total of 104614 registered patients and suggests identification of at least 10590 additional PID patients, mainly from countries located in Asia and Africa. Molecular defects in genes known to cause PID were identified and reported in 13852 (13.2% of all registered) patients.Although these data suggest some progress in the identification and documentation of PID patients worldwide, achieving the basic requirement for the global PID burden estimation and registration of undiagnosed patients will require more reinforcement of the progress, involving both improved diagnostic facilities and neonatal screening.
- Published
- 2020
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