a project of the German Society of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine

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Rare Disease Day: “Rare Is Not Rare” – DGAI Database OrphanAnesthesia Strengthens Patient Safety in Anesthesia Worldwide

Nuremberg. Up to 10,000 rare diseases are known worldwide, and new ones are identified every year. In the European Union, a disease is considered rare if no more than one in 2,000 people is affected. Individually, these diseases are rare – but collectively, they are not: In Germany alone, an estimated four million people are affected by a rare disease at some point in their lives. Rare diseases therefore represent a relevant issue for medical care – particularly when surgical procedures, emergencies, or childbirth require anesthesia. On the occasion of Rare Disease Day, the German Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (DGAI) draws attention to its international project OrphanAnesthesia.

“For people with rare diseases, medical care is often associated with additional uncertainties,” says DGAI President Prof. Dr. Gernot Marx. “In anesthesiology in particular, we carry a special responsibility because we frequently accompany patients in critical and time-sensitive situations. This makes it all the more important that relevant knowledge is available in a structured format – regardless of where and why a procedure takes place.”

When Experience Is Limited, Risk Increases

In rare diseases, limited clinical experience coincides with a demonstrably increased risk of anesthetic complications. For anesthesia teams, this means high demands in terms of preparation, planning, and execution – often under time pressure. This is precisely where OrphanAnesthesia comes in. The freely accessible database provides standardized, peer-reviewed recommendations for the anesthetic and emergency management of patients with rare diseases. Currently, recommendations for more than 230 conditions are available. In 2025 alone, the platform recorded more than 85,000 accesses worldwide.

“Rare diseases present anesthesia teams with particular challenges because there are often few established routines,” explains project lead Dr. Christine Gaik (Marburg). “Our recommendations help to identify risks at an early stage and to structure care safely – both for planned procedures and in emergencies.”

New Recommendations for Clinical Practice

Since the beginning of 2025, OrphanAnesthesia has been further expanded. Newly added recommendations include anesthesia management for Long QT syndrome, congenital insensitivity to pain, choanal atresia, pediatric nephrotic syndrome, and other syndromes. The recommendations provide practical guidance on the choice of anesthetic technique, perioperative planning, and postoperative monitoring. They are complemented by structured emergency information based on the internationally established ABCDE approach.
“Structured information can be decisive, especially in time-critical situations,” emphasizes project lead PD Dr. Philipp Gude (Bochum). “OrphanAnesthesia offers exactly this guidance – concise, evidence-based, and immediately accessible.”

A German Initiative with International Reach

OrphanAnesthesia was initiated in 2005 by the Scientific Working Group on Pediatric Anesthesia of the DGAI. Today, the project continues to be developed in collaboration with physicians and researchers worldwide – in cooperation with the European information platform Orphanet and several European professional societies, including the European Society of Paediatric Anaesthesia (ESPA), the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (ESAIC), and the Italian Society of Neonatal and Pediatric Anesthesia and Intensive Care (SARNePI).

An international network of anesthesiologists and experts in rare diseases from various medical disciplines contributes its knowledge on a voluntary basis to the development and peer review of the recommendations. OrphanAnesthesia thus exemplifies how medical knowledge can be pooled, continuously expanded, and made freely accessible worldwide.

Participation Welcome

Given the large number of rare diseases, the continuous expansion of the database remains a key task. The DGAI invites colleagues to actively contribute to OrphanAnesthesia – whether by authoring or reviewing recommendations or by sharing information with patient organizations.

 

New recommendation: Long-QT syndrome

We are pleased to announce that the new recommendation for Long QT Syndrome is now available online. We sincerely thank all authors (Prof. Kleinschmidt and Marius Graf) and reviewers (PD Dr. Sauer and Professor Dr. med. E. Schulze-Bahr) for their valuable contributions to this important work. 

New guidelines

We are happy to announce that we have some new guidelines online:

Many thanks to all contributors! 

Congenital Insensitivity to Pain

We have a new recommendation for Congenital Insensitivity to Pain. Many thanks to the author, Carlos R Degrandi Oliveira, and the two reviewers (Michael J. Wong, Dr Alasdair Parker,) for their support.

New recommendation: Osteopathia Striata

New recommendation online: Osteopathia Striata with cranial sclerosis [OS-CS]

Our thanks go to the author, Dominika Karlicka, as well as the reviewers, Dr. Dr Alana O'Dwyer, and Dr. Michael Fitzgerald, without whom the creation of the recommendation would not have been possible.

 

CLOVES syndrome online

We are pleased to inform you that we have a new recommendation online, and we would like to extend our thanks to the authors and reviewers:

CLOVES syndrome

Thanks to the authors (Luke Wiseman, Mike Wong) and reviewers (Christine Gaik, Nauzer Forbes) we were able to take another step towards improving patient safety.

 

New recommendation: Hardikar syndrome

We are pleased to inform you that we can publish an anesthesiological recommendation for the Hardikar Syndrome. The author is Carlos L. Errando Oyonarte, Spain, and the reviewers were Dr. Christine Gaik, Germany and Dr. Alana Strong, USA. Thank you very much for your support.

New project leaders

We would like to inform you that Professor Tino Münster has handed over the project OrphanAnesthesia to new project leaders:

Dr. Christine Gaik - University Hospital Marburg
Dr. Philipp Gude - University Hospital Bochum

You can find the contact details at https://www.orphananesthesia.eu/de/team.html.

We look forward to continuing our collaboration on the project.

 

Reviewer needed

Dear colleagues,

We are currently looking for reviewers!

If you are willing to support us, please get in touch! Thank you in advance.

Rare Disease Day

Today is Rare Disease Day!!! Many activities take place and we think of everyone who suffers from a rare disease!

Listen to our DGAI Podcast (german language) about Orphananesthesia and the Rare Disease Day: Podcast

 

OrphanAnesthesia depends on your expertise - please support us!

Are you familiar with a disease? Then the best way you can help is by writing a recommendation for an anaesthesiological treatment. Our peer review process checks all recommendations before publication. You are also welcome to support us as a reviewer. We are happy if you get in touch with us: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..


 

 

 

 


 

 

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