# The patient-driven Rare Disease Research Network: turning research on its head

**Authors:** Jo Balfour, Laura B Cowley, Georgina Windsor, Ellie Dalby, Miles Sibley, Amy Hunter, Rona M Smith

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2025-105045 · BMJ Open · 2025-10-27

## TL;DR

A new patient-led Rare Disease Research Network aims to align research with patient needs by enabling collaboration between patients and professionals.

## Contribution

The paper introduces the Rare Disease Research Network, a patient-led platform for co-producing rare disease research.

## Key findings

- The RDRN was co-produced with rare disease communities to ensure alignment with patient priorities.
- The network fosters upstream collaboration and empowers patients to actively participate in research.
- RDRN aims to build a resilient and self-sustaining research ecosystem for rare diseases.

## Abstract

The vast majority of healthcare research in the UK is investigator-led. While national progress in patient and public involvement (PPI) increasingly mandates patient consultation, research questions and outcomes still frequently misalign with patient priorities. This is particularly important in rare disease research, as more than 95% of 11 000 conditions have no effective or curative treatment, and around 20% are not clinically defined, making them difficult to diagnose and manage. The unmet physical, mental and emotional needs of people living with rare diseases are immense. Extensive guidance and toolkits exist to support investigators with PPI, but none target patient communities attempting to promote their own priorities, initiate or co-lead research.

This communication article introduces the newly established patient-led Rare Disease Research Network (RDRN).

Launched in November 2024, the RDRN is an open-access collaborative platform designed to support patient-driven and co-produced research, connecting patient and professional partners with similar research interests. Originally conceived by an ultra-rare patient group, the network was co-produced with the rare disease community, including individuals living with rare conditions, parents, carers and charity advocates, whose lived experience and priorities shaped every aspect of its design. Supported by academic and research networks, its collaborative development ensures RDRN removes barriers to participation while complementing existing initiatives. RDRN is a novel approach to driving new impactful research by aligning investigator priorities with real-world needs and building capacity from patients outward. Rare disease communities bring lived expertise, creativity and motivation. Yet without a structured route to collaborate, their insights are often lost. RDRN offers an inclusive space, fostering new partnerships and supporting upstream collaboration. The approach enables patients to become ‘research ready’ and empowers them to have an active role in generating ideas and delivering research from inception, leading to innovative research and driving meaningful change in patients’ lives. With further development, RDRN could present a lasting, scalable and unified model for co-designed rare disease research. By enabling trust, capacity and shared purpose, it can drive discovery, improve outcomes and build a more resilient and self-sustaining research ecosystem, underpinning key pillars of the 2021 UK Rare Diseases Framework.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Rare Disease (MESH:D035583)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

19 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12570899/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12570899