| Title |
Challenges and opportunities for the use of telehealth in rare disease diagnosis, treatment, research, and education: key opinion leader interviews by the IRDiRC telehealth task force |
| Authors |
Parisi, Melissa A ; Hartman, Adam L ; Letinturier, Mary Catherine V ; Tataru, Elena-Alexandra ; Antoniadou, Victoria ; Baynam, Gareth ; Bloom, Lara ; Crimi, Marco ; Della Rocca, Maria G ; Didato, Giuseppe ; Douzgou Houge, Sofia ; Jonker, Anneliene H ; Kawome, Martina ; Mueller, Friederike ; O’Brien, James ; Dua Puri, Ratna ; Ryan, Nuala ; Thong, Meow-Keong ; Tumienė, Birutė ; Chen, Faye H |
| DOI |
10.1177/26330040261427023 |
| Full Text |
|
| Is Part of |
Therapeutic advances in rare disease.. SAGE Publications Ltd. 2026, vol. 7, p. 1-19.. eISSN 2633-0040 |
| Keywords [eng] |
decentralized clinical trial ; eHealth ; IRDiRC ; key opinion leader ; peer mentoring ; rare disease ; rare disease care ; rare disease education ; rare disease research ; teleconsultation ; telehealth ; telemedicine |
| Abstract [eng] |
The International Rare Diseases Research Consortium (IRDiRC) Telehealth (TH) Task Force explored the use of TH for improving diagnosis, care, research, and education for rare diseases (RDs) worldwide. The Task Force members interviewed 23 key opinion leaders (KOLs), providing perspectives from experts in the use of TH for the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of RDs (10 KOLs); for research and evaluation in RDs (7); and for the continuing education of health care providers (HCPs) in RDs (6). The KOLs represented a broad array of diverse perspectives with regard to both geographic regions, including Europe, United States, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Asia, and professional expertise, including rare disease patients and family members, RD association spokespersons, TH association representatives, physicians, researchers, and regulatory authorities. The Task Force solicited KOL opinions to identify factors that influence TH in improving access to diagnosis, care, prevention, and research experiences for RD patients and providers as well as continuing education and peer mentoring for HCPs. This manuscript represents a synthesis of those interviews and some common themes that emerged, along with identification of evidence and knowledge gaps that will benefit from future research efforts to help advance and expand the use of TH for RD care, research, and education. KOLs agreed on the unique elements of RD medical care that could benefit from TH approaches and recognized the increasing role that remote assessments can play in supporting RD research. They identified models for health care provider education afforded by TH that can enhance care for RD patients and broaden the pool of experts in these conditions. While recognizing that barriers to broad implementation exist, they agreed that TH provides a unique tool to provide greater access to care for RD patients worldwide. |
| Published |
SAGE Publications Ltd |
| Type |
Journal article |
| Language |
English |
| Publication date |
2026 |
| CC license |
|