Professor Phil Bardin |
Recently
announced National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) funding
will enable Monash Health Translation Precinct researchers and clinicians to
investigate new therapies for patients with asthma, chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease (COPD) and other chronic inflammatory lung diseases.
Asthma
and COPD are the most prevalent diseases of the respiratory system, and impose
a significant burden on the Australian health care system.
In
addition to being a chronic burden, these diseases predispose affected
individuals to frequent viral and bacterial infections, often requiring
emergency department treatment.
The
NHMRC-funded collaborative research project at Monash University, Monash
Health and the Hudson Institute of Medical Research will investigate potential
therapies to reduce the impact of virus infections in patients with COPD and
asthma.
“Virus infections trigger asthma attacks, leading to lung deterioration
and a gradual decline in lung function,” said lead researcher and Director,
Monash Lung and Sleep, Professor Phil Bardin.
“People with asthma have increased levels of a molecule called
transforming growth factor-beta (TGFB), and our team has previously shown that
TGFB increases virus infection by suppressing the innate immune response, the
body’s first line of defence.”
Professor
Bardin’s project will determine the therapeutic potential of TGFB inhibitors that are already approved for
use in humans as well as other novel compounds, to reduce the impact of virus infections
in patients with COPD and asthma.
“Modulating TGFB levels may have a
substantial impact in preventing organ dysfunction, improving quality of life
and reducing the burden on the Australian health care system,” said Professor
Bardin.
“Importantly, these findings are
translatable to other chronic inflammatory conditions in which TGFB is
over-expressed, including chronic lung diseases, as well as diseases involving the
joints, liver, pancreas and kidneys.”
Professor
Bardin said this research has the potential to significantly improve the
quality of life of these patients, while reducing the burden of chronic
diseases on the Australian Health Care system.”
Professor
Bardin’s collaborators include Drs Belinda Thomas and Michael Gantier from the
Hudson Institute of Medical Research, Monash University’s Professor Kate
Loveland and Professor Jack Elias from Brown University, New York.
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