How rare is rare? A literature survey of the last 45 years of paleopathological research on ancient rare diseases

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Abstract

Objective

This paper aims to provide a quantitative estimation of the representation of diseases defined as rare today in the bioarchaeological literature and to outline the reasons for this.

Materials

A 45-year bibliometric study of publications in seven bioarchaeological journals, along with two journals and editorial groups of broader scientific focus.

Methods

Analyses of distribution patterns of the search hits and diachronic trends for achondroplasia, autosomal-dominant osteopetrosis, osteogenesis imperfecta, and osteopoikilosis, compared to those for tuberculosis as control measure of coverage.

Results

Studies of ancient rare diseases (ARD) are mostly published as case reports in specialized journals and their number did not benefit from the introduction of biomolecular studies. The higher frequency of cases of achondroplasia suggests that not all rare diseases are equally under-represented.

Conclusions

Rare diseases are still largely under-represented in bioarchaeological literature. Their marginality likely results from a combination of taphonomic, methodological and public visibility factors.

Significance

This article is the first attempt to provide a quantitative assessment of the under-representation of ARD and to outline the factors behind it.

Limitations

Rare diseases are an etiologically heterogeneous group. The number of surveyed journals and articles, as well as targeted diseases might be limiting factors.

Suggestions for Further Research

Increasing collection and dissemination of data on ARD; opening a wide-ranging debate on their definition; implementation of biomolecular studies.

Keywords

Bibliometric analysis
Tuberculosis
Achondroplasia
Osteopetrosis
Osteopoikilosis
Osteogenesis imperfecta

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