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Co-creating discovery in basic science: Challenges and opportunities in patient-partnered research for rare liver disease.

Created on 06 Jul 2026

Authors

Diana Nakib, Mary Vyas, Rachel Gomel, Sonya MacParland

Published in

Canadian liver journal. Volume 9. Issue 2. Pages 328-339. Epub Apr 16, 2026.

Abstract

Patient-partnered basic and translational research is the most productive and meaningful approach to developing informed research questions, generating high-quality data, and producing impactful work. While several organizations have published guidelines for patient-partnered research, few experiential reports in basic science are written from both the patient and researcher perspectives and comment on real-time practical challenges and approaches that ensure the establishment and maintenance of a non-tokenistic, organized, and successful research partnership with patient partners.
We describe patient partners' and researchers' experiences working together in a basic science and translational research team studying the drivers of primary sclerosing cholangitis, a rare liver disease for which liver transplantation remains the only treatment to disrupt disease progression. We outline approaches used to support meaningful communication, collaboration, and shared output among project stakeholders, drawing on the perspectives of both basic science researchers and patient representatives involved in long-standing joint research projects.
Several practical elements support the success of patient partnership in basic and translational science, including structured communication, clear role definition, mutual respect, sustained engagement, and intentional mechanisms to support patient partners' meaningful contributions. We highlight challenges and strategies used to address them in real time, offering insight into how patient-researcher partnerships can be maintained in an organized, authentic, and non-tokenistic way.
This review highlights a patient-partnered research team's experiential insights to bridge the gap between published guidance and real-world practice, reinforcing how authentic patient-researcher partnerships can drive more inclusive and impactful basic and translational science.

PMID:
42404993
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 06 Jul 2026.

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