Working to Create Rare Disease Advisory Councils in all 50 States

Fifteen states done, 35 to go.

Fifteen states have established a Rare Disease Advisory Council (RDAC) to give the rare disease community, including those living with Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), a stronger voice in state government. Another dozen states are actively working to establish RDACs this year.

With assistance from the National Organization for Rare Disorders (NORD), patient organizations, such as Hope in Focus (formally Sofia Sees Hope), and the broader rare disease community, RDACs around the country work to help states strategically address barriers faced by people living with rare diseases. The councils give stakeholders an opportunity to make formal recommendations to state leaders on critical rare disease issues, including increased awareness, diagnostic tools, and access to affordable treatments and cures.

Sofia Sees Hope, based in Ledyard, Conn., annually gives information to legislators on the Connecticut General Assembly’s Public Health Committee, letting them know that rare disease advocates and those living with a rare disease, need state and federal support in crafting legislation to help the rare disease community. 

The last day of February each year is officially Rare Disease Day, a time to raise awareness among the public and decision makers about rare diseases and their impacts on patients’ lives. NORD sponsors Rare Disease Day in the United States, alongside its sister organization, the European Organization for Rare Disorders (EURODIS), which organizes the official international campaign.

Find out here what is happening globally in celebration of Rare Disease Day. 

7,000 Rare Diseases in the U.S.

A disease is defined as rare in the United States if it affects fewer than 200,000 Americans. LCA and other inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) are among the approximately 7,000 rare diseases that exist nationally, affecting 1 in 10 people. These diseases include more than 500 types of rare cancers and all pediatric cancers. 

Between 25-30 million Americans live with a rare disease, including about 300,000 in Connecticut. 

NORD’s Connecticut Rare Action Network, along with other such groups nationwide, will highlight RDACs as part of its virtual celebration of Rare Disease Day 2021. Connecticut’s Rare Disease Day celebration will be at 9 a.m. ET, Friday, Feb. 26. You can register to participate in this free event by clicking here. 

NORD also just released its sixth edition of its State Report Card* that analyzes the 50 states and Washington, D.C., on eight policy issues that impact the rare disease community. The organization launched its report card project to evaluate the effectiveness of states serving people with rare diseases.

Each state has its own report card that addresses Medicaid Financial Eligibility, Medicaid Nutrition, Newborn Screening, Prescription Drug Out-of-Pocket Costs, Protecting Patients in State Medicaid Programs, Protecting Patients in State-Regulated Insurance, Rare Disease Advisory Councils, and Step Therapy (trying less expensive options before “stepping up” to drugs that cost more).

State governments make decisions every day affecting the rare community. They play critical roles in ensuring access to health care providers, services, and treatments needed to thrive, along with the design of their Medicaid program benefits, and regulation of some insurance plans. The councils offer forums for discussion about these issues.

Learn which states have Rare Disease Advisory Councils

As one Connecticut legislator said at a previous celebration, having one day to recognize rare diseases is not enough. 

“It needs to be Rare Disease Day every day in the state of Connecticut,” said State Rep. Jonathan Steinberg, co-chairman of the General Assembly’s Public Health Committee.

Connecticut Volunteer State Ambassador Lesley Bennet  – along with ambassadors nationwide, doctors, researchers, advocates, caregivers, patients, legislators, and business leaders – take this time to advocate state-by-state for better resources and outcomes for people living with rare diseases.

Bennett said many of their patients have difficulty getting access to services because people don’t understand the disorders. 

Patients, caregivers, families, and providers in North Carolina created the first RDAC six years ago; 15 states have active councils with1 2 more on their way toward fruition, for a total of 27 states.

Another 23 states, including Connecticut, do not have such councils but efforts continue through NORD’s Project RDAC, launched last fall. Connecticut established a task force to study whether to create an RDAC, but the group disbanded in 2019. 

Check out this map to see if your state has an RDAC or if NORD is working on legislation to create one. To start an effort in a new state, go to RDAC@rarediseases.org

Council composition varies from state to state in size, duties, and accountability requirements. It also depends on the type of entity that houses the RDAC, such as a state department of health or a non-profit organization.

A council typically comprises various stakeholders, including patients, caregivers, doctors, insurers, biotechnology companies, researchers, and state officials.

Project RDAC aims to optimize the existing councils and increase the number of groups nationwide by opening collaborative opportunities among the councils, creating educational resources to guide them, and helping more states pass legislation establishing high-functioning councils.

Which States Have Rare Disease Advisory Councils?

15 states with an established Rare Disease Advisory Council:

Alabama, Kentucky, Illinois, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Utah, Tennessee, and West Virginia.

Arkansas, California, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Michigan, New Jersey, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.

23 states with no Rare Disease Advisory Council:

Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Louisiana, Maryland, Maine, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, and Wyoming.

‘Let’s Chat About …’ Webinar Offers LCA Overview and Updates on Clinical Trials

In the debut of Hope in Focus (formally Sofia Sees Hope) ‘Let’s Chat About …’ monthly webinar series, Ben Shaberman of the Foundation Fighting Blindness, provided his Zoom audience with a plethora of information about Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), highlighting some of the more than 40 clinical trials underway to find treatments and cures for LCA and other rare inherited retinal diseases (IRDs) and giving updates on promising preclinical research. 

The recorded webinar aired 1 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2021, and can be seen here. Elissa Bass, our marketing and communications director, moderated the session.

Shaberman, Senior Director, Scientific Outreach & Community Engagement, stumbled across a science writing position at the Foundation Fighting Blindness 16 years ago without a clue about retinas or blindness. He called his move to the Foundation serendipitous. He knew he made the right choice after hearing retinal researcher Dean Bok, PhD, tell attendees at a 2005 Foundation conference how he was drawn to the field by the seduction of the retina’s myriad complexities and inner workings.

Shaberman, too, felt pulled by the intriguing science of the retina.

As such, so are the 27 forms of LCA that cause varying kinds of visual impairment within each gene mutation and within each affected person. An estimated 8,000 people in the United States have LCA.

The path of retinal research

Shaberman took his audience from the beginnings of identifying the RPE65 gene in 1993 and learning shortly thereafter it could lead to LCA, to using mice models and later studying Briard dogs that had the same gene mutation that caused LCA in humans. A clinical trial at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia led to the 2017 FDA approval of the breakthrough gene therapy LUXTURNA®, developed by Spark Therapeutics. The drug successfully improved the vision of many of the LCA2-RPE65 patients who received the treatment through subretinal injections.

When children receive an LCA diagnosis, their families should find a good retinal specialist, get regular exams, and ultimately get a confirmed genetic diagnosis to be on the path to more specific information and research into that form of LCA, Shaberman said.

Families also should register with the Foundation’s My Retina Tracker®, a free and secure online registry that facilitates getting a confirmed genetic diagnosis by making registrants eligible for free genetic testing.

The registry becomes your personal retinal health record, updated by you. It employs state-of-the-art database technology to protect privacy and adheres to the highest standards of confidentiality and ethics. 

It also notifies registrants of clinical trials and gives researchers access to their disease data – not their personal information – to advance research and therapy development associated with LCA and IRDs. 

Reading research publications and attending events sponsored by the Foundation and by Sofia Sees Hope also provide opportunities for families to interact and learn the latest research. Shaberman and Bass encouraged people affected by LCA and their families to contact them, respectively, through the Foundation’s website and/or the Sofia Sees Hope website for specific information on clinical trials or other questions and concerns about living with LCA. 

“Yes, it’s work,” Shaberman said. “You have to be your own advocate and your own child’s advocate, but more and more information is becoming available, and that’s the good news.”

Shaberman also reviewed some of the more than 40 retinal clinical trials in the pipeline for LCA and other IRDs:

Join us Feb. 16

February’s “Lets Chat About …” webinar airs at 3 p.m. ET, Tuesday, Feb. 16. Our guest will be Wiley A. Chambers, MD, Supervisory Medical Officer for the Office of New Drugs, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Register here.