Establishment of a web-based registry for rare (orphan) pediatric lung diseases in the United Kingdom: the BPOLD registry

Pediatr Pulmonol. 2008 May;43(5):451-6. doi: 10.1002/ppul.20783.

Abstract

Background: Children with orphan lung diseases (defined as a prevalence of <1 in 2000) receive suboptimal care due to a lack of understanding of pathophysiology and management.

Aim: To develop a low cost, multidisease, web-based registry for children with rare lung diseases.

Methods: The British Pediatric Orphan Lung Disease (BPOLD) electronic registry was established to provide a web-based method for recording monthly incidence data on nine rare pediatric respiratory diseases (www.bpold.co.uk). An email reporting system was developed which required clinicians to input a username and password to respond following a monthly email reminder. The initial reporting rate was poor despite many registrants. The method for reporting was subsequently streamlined enabling reporting to be done via email by a single mouse-click. A follow-up email, with consent forms as attachments, was automatically sent to positive respondents, with negative responses recorded directly to the database. Non-responders receive a reminder email after 2 weeks.

Results: Initially 101 respiratory clinicians registered via the BPOLD site, responding 162 times over 17 months. In the 12 months following redevelopment (total 12 monthly group emails) 143 of 222 BPRS members (64%) have provided 1,001 responses. Forty-eight clinicians (34% of responders) have responded to 10-12 group emails, with the next highest total being those responding to one only. One hundred fifty-eight cases of orphan lung disease have been identified.

Conclusions: We have demonstrated the successful establishment of a low cost, web-based registry for children with rare lung diseases. There is an urgent need for European and International collaboration with the establishment of electronic registries for children with rare diseases, if the inequities of health care are to be addressed. A web-based approach, similar to the one we have developed, will enable this.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Child
  • Data Collection / methods
  • Databases, Factual / statistics & numerical data*
  • Electronic Mail
  • Humans
  • Incidence
  • Internet*
  • Lung Diseases / epidemiology*
  • Rare Diseases
  • Registries / statistics & numerical data*
  • United Kingdom / epidemiology