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Review
. 2019 Mar 20;14(1):68.
doi: 10.1186/s13023-019-1041-5.

The Korean undiagnosed diseases program: lessons from a one-year pilot project

Affiliations
Review

The Korean undiagnosed diseases program: lessons from a one-year pilot project

Soo Yeon Kim et al. Orphanet J Rare Dis. .

Abstract

Background: The Korean Undiagnosed Diseases Program (KUDP) was launched in January 2017 as a one-year pilot project to address the increasing global interest in patients with undiagnosed rare diseases. The purpose of this paper is to summarize the project results and emphasize the unmet research needs among patients with undiagnosed rare diseases in Korea.

Results: Patient enrollment, assessment, and diagnostic processes were determined by the KUDP clinical expert consortium. Patients followed a diagnostic workflow after being categorized into one of four groups: I) insufficient clinical information or lack of standard diagnostic processes; II) undiagnosed due to low disease awareness; III) clinically diagnosed but unconfirmed genetically due to genetic heterogeneities; or IV) unknown disease due to complex, atypical clinical presentations. After excluding two patients from group I, 97 patients were enrolled, including 10 in group II, 67 in group III, and 20 in group IV. Most of them (92 of 97, 94.8%) were pediatric patients (< 18 years old) and 59 (60.8%) were male. The primary symptoms for 80 patients (82.5%) were neurologic. During the one-year pilot study, 72 patients completed a diagnostic assessment including clinical and molecular genetic analyses; some patients also underwent pathological or biochemical analysis. Twenty-eight of these patients (28/72, 38.9%) achieved molecular genetic diagnosis. Thirteen patients were diagnosed based on traditional tests, including biochemical assay, single or targeted genetic analysis, and chromosomal microarray. We performed whole exome sequencing on 52 patients, among whom 15 (28.8%, 15/52) reached a final diagnosis. One new disorder was identified via international collaboration.

Conclusions: Using an efficient clinical diagnostic workflow, this KUDP pilot study resulted in a fair diagnostic success rate, improving the potential for additional diagnoses and new scientific discovery of complex and rare diseases. KUDP also satisfied unmet needs for rare diseases with multisystem involvement, highlighting the value of emerging genomic technologies for further research into rare and still-undiagnosed conditions.

Keywords: Korea; Rare disease; Undiagnosed disease program; Whole exome sequencing.

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Conflict of interest statement

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The study protocol was in accordance with the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Seoul National University.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Characteristics of the enrolled patients. a Number of patients in each category. b Age distribution at initial symptom onset and KUDP admission. c Time between initial symptom onset and KUDP admission. d Distribution of organ involvement. e Number of presenting symptoms per patient. f Number of completed tests for each patient before KUDP admission
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Pathology findings and mutation profiles of patient with Pompe disease. a, b Muscle pathology with hematoxylin and eosin staining and modified Gomori trichrome staining, indicating small angulated muscle fiber with rimmed vacuole, respectively. c Pedigree with mutation profiles and result of GAA sequencing for patient

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