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What incentives do scientists have to study rare diseases

  • December 27, 2023
  • Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
  • Category: DPN Topics
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What incentives do scientists have to study rare diseases

Subject: Science and Tech

Section: Defence

Context:

  • The 2024 Breakthrough Prizes laureates demonstrate the cutting­ edge ways scientists are making use of basic science to improve the quality of human lives.
  • But they also highlight systemic, non-­scientific factors that influence what scientists choose to study and who gets to access the fruits of their labour .

About Breakthrough Prizes:

  • Created in 2010 by Silicon Valley entrepreneurs: Milner, Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan (Facebook), and Sergey Brin (Google).
  • Acknowledges top scientists globally in fundamental sciences.
  • Categories include mathematics, fundamental physics, and life sciences.
  • First awarded in 2012; inaugural ceremony hosted by Morgan Freeman.
  • The Breakthrough Prizes, often dubbed the “Oscars of Science,”
  • Awardees receive $3 million each, surpassing the Nobel laureates’ $1 million prize.
  • Includes additional prizes like New Horizons in Physics and Mathematics and the Maryam Mirzakhani New Frontiers Prize for early-career researchers.

Rare Diseases

  • Rare diseases, also known as orphan diseases, pose unique challenges due to their low prevalence in the population. 

Characteristics Of Rare Diseases:

  • Rare diseases are debilitating lifelong conditions occurring infrequently in the human population.
  • WHO defines rare diseases with a prevalence of 1 or less per 1000 population.
  • In India, a prevalence of less than 100 patients per 100,000 people is considered as a rare disease.

Examples Of Rare Diseases:

  • Tyrosinemia-Type 1:
    • A rare autosomal recessive genetic metabolic disorder.
    • Characterized by a deficiency of the enzyme fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH).
    • Results in the abnormal accumulation of tyrosine, potentially causing severe liver disease.
  • Gaucher’s Disease:
    • Characterized by the accumulation of glucocerebroside in organs.
    • Organs, particularly the spleen, liver, and bone marrow, enlarge and may suffer impaired function.
  • Wilson’s Disease:
    • A rare genetic disorder leading to the accumulation of copper in organs.
    • Affects the liver, brain, and cornea.
  • Dravet-Lennox Gastaut Syndrome:
    • Two distinct types of epileptic syndromes.
    • Dravet syndrome: A severe form of epilepsy beginning in infancy.
    • Lennox-Gastaut syndrome: Childhood-onset epilepsy with multiple seizure types and cognitive impairment.

RARE DISEASES IN INDIA:

  • Approximately 450 rare diseases identified, with 80% of patients affected by around 350 rare diseases.
  • Estimated burden of 80 to 96 million cases annually in India.
  • 70-80% of rare diseases are genetic, and the majority remain asymptomatic until later in life.
  • Less than 5% of rare diseases in India have available therapies.

GOVERNMENT INTERVENTIONS:

  • National Policy for Rare Diseases, 2021:
    • Aims to lower the incidence and prevalence of rare diseases through an integrated preventive strategy.
    • Encompasses awareness generation, screening, and counseling programs.
  • Production Linked Incentive Scheme 2.0 for Pharmaceuticals:
    • An INR 15,000 Crore initiative supporting orphan drugs development.
    • Targets Category 1 pharmaceutical goods in the Production Linked Incentive Scheme.
  • Central Drugs Standard Control Organisation (CDSCO):
    • Provisions for fast-track processing of applications for rare disease drugs in drug trials and experimental therapies.
    • Exemption of application fees for potential drug candidates.
  • Genomics for Understanding Rare Diseases: India Alliance Network (GUaRDIAN):
    • A non-profit clinical genomics research network.
    • Establishes a network of clinicians and scientists for extensive clinical genomics research in India.
  • Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR):
    • Establishes the Indian Genetic Disease Database (IGDD).
    • Tracks mutations in causal genes for genetic diseases common in India, providing insights to physicians and researchers.
Science and tech What incentives do scientists have to study rare diseases

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