4.4 Article

Development and Implementation of the AIDA International Registry for Patients with Non-Infectious Scleritis

Journal

OPHTHALMOLOGY AND THERAPY
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 887-897

Publisher

SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
DOI: 10.1007/s40123-022-00466-2

Keywords

Autoinflammatory diseases; Clinical management; Inflammatory ocular diseases; Innovative biotechnologies; International registry; Personalised medicine; Precision medicine; Rare diseases

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This article introduces the design, methods, development and deployment of the international registry promoted by the AutoInflammatory Disease Alliance (AIDA) Network for defining and assessing patients with immune-mediated scleritis. The registry collects real-world data from patients worldwide and allows standardized data collection while ensuring data security and anonymity. It also communicates with similar registries to promote research collaboration. The registry has already involved 99 centers from 20 countries and has shown significant progress in terms of participant numbers and data collection.
Introduction This article points out the design, methods, development and deployment of the international registry promoted by the AutoInflammatory Disease Alliance (AIDA) Network with the aim to define and assess paediatric and adult patients with immune-mediated scleritis. Methods This registry collects both retrospective and prospective real-world data from patients with non-infectious scleritis through the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) tool and aims to promote knowledge and real-life evidence from patients enrolled worldwide; the registry also allows the collection of standardised data, ensuring the highest levels of security and anonymity of patients' data and flexibility to change according to scientific acquisitions over time. The communication with other similar registries has been also ensured in order to pursue the sustainability of the project with respect to the adaptation of collected data to the most diverse research projects. Results Since the launch of the registry, 99 centres have been involved from 20 countries and four continents. Forty-eight of the centres have already obtained a formal approval from their local ethics committees. At present, the platform counts 259 users (95 principal investigators, 160 site investigators, 2 lead investigators, and 2 data managers); the platform collects baseline and follow-up data using 3683 fields organised into 13 instruments, including patient's demographics, history, symptoms, trigger or risk factors, therapies and healthcare utilization. Conclusions The development of the AIDA International Registry for patients with non-infectious scleritis will allow solid research on this rare condition. Real-world evidence resulting from standardised real-life data will lead to the optimisation of routine clinical and therapeutic management, which are currently limited by the rarity of this ocular inflammatory condition.

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