4 min read
If you or a loved one has been diagnosed with a rare condition, you’re not alone, and you deserve clear, honest information to help you navigate the journey ahead.
The word “rare” can feel isolating. But here’s something important to know: rare diseases are, collectively, far more common than most people realise. Taken together, they touch hundreds of millions of lives around the world. More than 300 million people around the world have one of the more than 7,000 known rare diseases.1
A disease is called “rare” based on how many people have it, not how serious it is. Different countries draw the line differently, depending on their population size and healthcare systems. What they all share: these are conditions that don’t affect most people, which also means they’re often less well-understood, less funded, and harder to diagnose.
Some rare diseases are mild and manageable. Others require ongoing, specialised care throughout a person’s life. Most are long-lasting, and for the vast majority, there is still no approved cure or targeted treatment.
Being rare doesn’t mean being unimportant. It means the healthcare system needs to work harder to support people living with these conditions, and that’s exactly why awareness, research, and community matter so much.
This article will help you understand what rare diseases are, what may cause them, how they are grouped, and why genetics often plays an important role in understanding these conditions.
Doctors and researchers organise rare diseases in a few different ways. This helps with diagnosis, treatment, and research, and helps you understand where your (or your loved one’s) condition fits.
Most rare diseases (about 70–80%) have a genetic root. The rest involve the immune system, certain rare cancers, or causes that are not yet fully understood.
Rare diseases can involve almost any part of the body:
This is one of the most common questions families ask, and the answer is: not always. There’s an important distinction between genetic diseases and inherited ones.
Inherited rare diseases are caused by genetic mutations passed from one or both parents. Well-known examples include cystic fibrosis, sickle cell disease, and Duchenne muscular dystrophy. A family history may reveal similar conditions, but not always, especially if parents are unaffected “carriers.”
Non-inherited (sporadic) rare diseases happen on their own. They may be caused by:
A person can be the only one in their entire family with a rare genetic disease. It simply means the mutation occurred for the first time in them.
Around 95% of rare diseases do not have an approved treatment plan. Understanding the genetic basis of a rare disease isn’t just about science, it has real, practical benefits for patients and families:
Progress is being made, especially in precision medicine and “orphan drugs” (therapies developed specifically for rare conditions). But significant challenges remain:
If you’re navigating a rare disease diagnosis, for yourself or someone you love. know that advocacy, community, and connecting with specialists matters. You shouldn’t have to figure this out alone.

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