Medical doctors who both treat patients and conduct research are known as physician-scientists, and procedural physician-scientists are those who examine disease pathology first-hand, such as surgeons.
Physician-scientists gain a unique perspective that allows them to translate discoveries from the lab to patient care more effectively, and they actively push the boundaries of medical research.
This "bench-to-bedside" approach has led to significant advancements in medicine and measurable improvements in patient outcomes. Twelve Nobel Prizes in Physiology or Medicine have recognized this work, which includes uncovering the physiologic effects of thyroid surgery and discovering how the bacteria H. pylori is linked to gastric diseases.
But there are challenges to sustaining this workforce. Fewer than 2% of U.S. surgeons hold National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding and rising clinical demands make balancing patient care and research roles increasingly difficult.
Addressing these challenges calls for a team approach, combining institutional support with team-based research and dedicated mentorship, says Sajid A. Khan, MD, associate professor of surgery (oncology), chief of hepato-pancreato-biliary and mixed tumors, and co-director of the Yale Center for Clinical Investigation Team Science Program at Yale School of Medicine (YSM).
In a recent paper published in Cancers, Khan and his co-authors described the opportunities that come with this kind of approach and strategies for empowering procedural physician-scientists.
“We are currently in the era of academic health systems,” says Khan. “There is opportunity for hospitals and academic departments to create environments that enable excellent clinical care based on cutting edge clinical research.”
Khan is leading efforts to enrich collaborations at YSM and empower procedural physician-scientists to achieve both patient care and biomedical discoveries. We spoke with him about the particular contributions of procedural physician-scientists, how to support them, and where YSM is moving the needle.