Maintenance Notice

Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Who will be affected?

Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Medical Informatics

Date Submitted: Sep 22, 2025
Open Peer Review Period: Sep 22, 2025 - Nov 17, 2025
Date Accepted: Apr 20, 2026
(closed for review but you can still tweet)

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

The Orphanet Nomenclature and Classification of Rare Diseases for Improved Patient Recognition and Data Interoperability: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis

Lucano C, Lagorce D, Olry A, Ali H, Lanneau V, De Carvalho M, Dilsizoglu Senol A, Fructuoso M, Gaillard E, Gaillard MC, Mihic S, Tannoury M, Sauvage F, Rodwell C, Maiella S, Hanauer M, Rath A

The Orphanet Nomenclature and Classification of Rare Diseases for Improved Patient Recognition and Data Interoperability: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis

JMIR Med Inform 2026;14:e84553

DOI: 10.2196/84553

PMID: 42417450

The Orphanet Nomenclature and Classification of rare diseases: a standard terminology for improved patient recognition and data interoperability

  • Caterina Lucano; 
  • David Lagorce; 
  • Annie Olry; 
  • Houda Ali; 
  • Valérie Lanneau; 
  • Mickael De Carvalho; 
  • Aysegul Dilsizoglu Senol; 
  • Marta Fructuoso; 
  • Emilie Gaillard; 
  • Marie-Cécile Gaillard; 
  • Seed Mihic; 
  • Mariana Tannoury; 
  • Florence Sauvage; 
  • Charlotte Rodwell; 
  • Sylvie Maiella; 
  • Marc Hanauer; 
  • Ana Rath

ABSTRACT

Background:

Although individually uncommon, rare diseases (RD) affect an estimated 300 million people worldwide. Establishing a public health approach to RD requires counting diseases and affected patients. However, RD are under-represented in medical terminologies, with only a small fraction of RD possessing specific and unambiguous codes, and these codes not being explicitly designated as rare.

Objective:

This paper presents the Orphanet Nomenclature of RD, the only RD-specific codification and classification framework meeting the high-quality standards of a medical terminology. We describe its development, updating, and mapping methodology, and provide an updated and precise count of RD, essential to inform policy, resource allocation, and healthcare strategies.

Methods:

To tackle the challenge of RD codification and interoperability, Orphanet has developed a nomenclature of RD that provides unique and time-stable disease identifiers (ORPHAcodes) and meets the gold standards for implementation in health information systems and systematic research collections. The Orphanet Nomenclature of RD is multilingual and versioned; its development and updates rely on standardized procedures, manual curation and expert validation, reflecting advancements in RD knowledge and clinical practice. Its production process also includes systematic medical validated mappings to major biomedical terminologies to ensure semantic interoperability.

Results:

As of July 2025, the Orphanet Nomenclature includes a total of 6527 RD, multiclassified into 29 classifications, each corresponding to a medical domain, accurately representing the complex multisystemic nature of RD. Extensive qualified mappings ensure semantic interoperability: overall, 97.4% of RD are mapped to at least one ICD-10 code (with only 6.3% exhibiting an exact equivalence), 71.7% are mapped to at least one ICD-11 code (15.3% with an exact equivalence) and 93.8% are mapped to SNOMED CT (all with an exact equivalence). Genetic diseases represent 72.2% of all RD, and 63.4% are mapped to at least one phenotypic OMIM number.

Conclusions:

By addressing the underrepresentation of RD in medical terminologies, ORPHAcodes enable accurate patient identification, advance research and healthcare interoperability, and help in shaping public health policies. The recognition of the Orphanet Nomenclature as the reference terminology for RD clinical coding in Europe underscores its pivotal role in the global RD ecosystem.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Lucano C, Lagorce D, Olry A, Ali H, Lanneau V, De Carvalho M, Dilsizoglu Senol A, Fructuoso M, Gaillard E, Gaillard MC, Mihic S, Tannoury M, Sauvage F, Rodwell C, Maiella S, Hanauer M, Rath A

The Orphanet Nomenclature and Classification of Rare Diseases for Improved Patient Recognition and Data Interoperability: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis

JMIR Med Inform 2026;14:e84553

DOI: 10.2196/84553

PMID: 42417450

Download PDF


Request queued. Please wait while the file is being generated. It may take some time.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.