Prevalence (number of people living with a disease at a given moment), rather than
incidence (number of new diagnoses in a given year), is used to describe the impact of rare diseases. The
Global Genes Project estimates some 300 million people worldwide are affected by a rare disease. The
European Organization for Rare Diseases (EURORDIS) estimates that between 3.5 and 5.9% of the world's population is affected by one of approx. 6,000 distinct rare diseases identified to-date. European Union has suggested that between 6 and 8% of the European population could be affected by a rare disease sometime in their lives. About 80% of rare diseases have a genetic component and only about 400 have therapies, according to Rare Genomics Institute. Rare diseases can vary in prevalence between populations, so a disease that is rare in some populations may be common in others. This is especially true of
genetic diseases and
infectious diseases. An example is
cystic fibrosis, a genetic disease: it is rare in most parts of
Asia but relatively common in Europe and in populations of European descent. In smaller communities, the
founder effect can result in a disease that is very rare worldwide being prevalent within the smaller community. Many infectious diseases are prevalent in a given geographic area but rare everywhere else. Other diseases, such as many rare forms of
cancer, have no apparent pattern of distribution but are simply rare. The classification of other conditions depends in part on the population being studied: All forms of cancer in children are generally considered rare, because so few children develop cancer, but the same cancer in adults may be more common. Estimating the incidence and prevalence of rare diseases is a complex process due to their wide range of prevalence rates. Rare diseases with higher prevalences can be estimated through a screening panel or patient registries, while diseases which are exceedingly rare may only be able to be estimated through a multi-step nationwide reporting process or case reports. Therefore, the data is often incomplete and complex to amalgamate, compare, and update continually. The Genetic and Rare Diseases Information Center at the
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences curates and compiles rare disease prevalence and incidence from PubMed articles and abstracts using a combination of deep learning algorithms and rare disease experts. About 40 rare diseases have a far higher prevalence in
Finland; these are known collectively as
Finnish heritage disease. Similarly, there are rare genetic diseases among the
Amish religious communities in the US and among
ethnically Jewish people. ==Characteristics==