| Literature DB >> 23248053 |
Anna Laura van der Laan1, Marianne Boenink.
Abstract
The label 'Translational Research' (TR) has become ever more popular in the biomedical domain in recent years. It is usually presented as an attempt to bridge a supposed gap between knowledge produced at the lab bench and its use at the clinical bedside. This is claimed to help society harvest the benefits of its investments in scientific research. The rhetorical as well as moral force of the label TR obscure, however, that it is actually used in very different ways. In this paper, we analyse the scientific discourse on TR, with the aim to disentangle and critically evaluate the different meanings of the label. We start with a brief reconstruction of the history of the concept. Subsequently, we unravel how the label is actually used in a sample of scientific publications on TR and examine the presuppositions implied by different views of TR. We argue that it is useful to distinguish different views of TR on the basis of three dimensions, related to (1) the construction of the 'translational gap'; (2) the model of the translational process; and (3) the cause of the perceived translational gap. We conclude that the motive to make society benefit from its investments in biomedical science may be laudable, but that it is doubtful whether the dominant views of TR will contribute to this end.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 23248053 PMCID: PMC4293498 DOI: 10.1007/s10728-012-0236-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Care Anal ISSN: 1065-3058
Fig. 1Number of published articles with the terms “Translational Research”, “Translational Science” or “Translational Medicine” each year, as appeared in a Pubmed search (carried out September 9, 2011)
The construction of translational gaps
| Side 1 | Side 2 | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Results from new knowledge gained from basic scientific research | A) New approaches or methods | “[…] translating understanding into entirely new approaches to therapy” [ |
| B) Knowledge of the human body | “[…] investigations in humans which define the biology of disease” [ | |
| C) Medical applications | “[…] to translate more quickly the myriad discoveries in biomedical research into more effective applications relevant to human health and disease” [ | |
| D) Improvement of clinical practice | “[…] to improve the application of scientific discoveries from “the bench” to actual patient care at “the bedside” […]” [ | |
| E) Benefit for the individual patient | “[…] translation of […] scientific knowledge into patient benefit […]” [ | |
| F) Improvement of public health | “From evidence based medicine to sustainable solutions for public health problems” [ |
Fig. 2Translational research as a linear process of different succeeding steps
The dimensions of translational research
| Dimension | Positions |
|---|---|
| Scope and location of the translational gap | Narrow |
| Broad | |
| Model of translational process | Linear |
| Bi-directional | |
| Complex | |
| Cause of the translational gap | External to science |
| Internal to science |