Journal of Clinical and Translational Science (Jan 2023)

Hereditary renal cancer patient and public involvement group: A collaborative, consensus decision process to develop a communication tool for patient use

  • Ellen Colvin,
  • Stephanie Ng,
  • John Hepworth,
  • Janice Hepworth,
  • Thomas Hartley,
  • Nicola Godfrey,
  • Karen Tricker,
  • Jeanette Rothwell,
  • Glenda Beaman,
  • Emma R. Woodward

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2023.39
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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Patient and public involvement (PPI) must be more frequently embedded within clinical research to ensure translational outcomes are patient-led and meet patient needs. Active partnerships with patients and public groups are an important opportunity to hear patient voices, understand patient needs, and inform future research avenues. A hereditary renal cancer (HRC) PPI group was developed with the efforts of patient participants (n = 9), pooled from recruits within the early detection for HRC pilot study, working in collaboration with researchers and healthcare professionals (n = 8). Patient participants had HRC conditions including Von Hippel–Lindau (n = 3) and Hereditary Leiomyomatosis and Renal Cell Carcinoma (n = 5), and public participants included two patient Trustees (n = 2) from VHL UK & Ireland Charity. Discussions among the enthusiastic participants guided the development of a novel patient information sheet for HRC patients. This communication tool was designed to aid patients when informing family members about their diagnoses and the wider implications for relatives, a gap identified by participants within group discussions. While this partnership was tailored for a specific HRC patient and public group, the process implemented can be employed for other hereditary cancer groups and could be transferable within other healthcare settings.

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